Insulin Lispro: Its Role in the Treatment of Diabetes Mellitus

1996 ◽  
Vol 30 (11) ◽  
pp. 1263-1271 ◽  
Author(s):  
R Keith Campbell ◽  
Lance K Campbell ◽  
John R White

OBJECTIVE: To introduce a rapid-acting human insulin analog, insulin lispro; to review its pharmacology, therapeutics, pharmacokinetics, dosing guidelines, adverse effects, and drug interactions; and to summarize the clinical trials of its efficacy and safety alone and in comparison with regular human insulin in the treatment of diabetes mellitus. DATA SOURCES: A MEDLINE database search was completed to identify all relevant articles, including reviews; Eli Lilly and Co.; published articles and abstracts; and review chapters from medical textbooks. STUDY SELECTION: Due to the relatively few citations listed in MEDLINE (12 as of December 1995), most of the studies reported were found from abstracts summarizing the clinical action, adverse effects, or pharmacokinetics of insulin lispro in healthy volunteers or patients with diabetes mellitus. A few of the studies used patients with diabetes mellitus in multicenter, randomized, crossover trials of insulin lispro. DATA EXTRACTION: All clinical trials that were available prior to submission of this manuscript for publication, including unpublished reports, were reviewed. DATA SYNTHESIS: The human insulin analog, insulin lispro, which is biosynthetically made by inverting the amino acid sequence of human insulin at B-28 and B-29, is more effective than regular human insulin in improving postprandial glucose control. Subcutaneous injections of insulin lispro result in decreased blood glucose peaks following meals and a potential decreased risk of hypoglycemic episodes, including nighttime hypoglycemia in patients with type 1 diabetes. Insulin lispro in comparison with regular human insulin provides equal or slightly better blood glucose control. When compared with subcutaneous injections of regular human insulin, the peak serum insulin concentration of insulin lispro is three times higher, time to peak is 4.2 times faster, the absorption rate constant is double, and the duration of action is half as long. Insulin lispro is similar to regular human insulin with reference to dose, toxicity, adverse effects, drug interactions, and imrnunogenicity. When insulin lispro is mixed with human NPH (isophane) or Lente insulins, insulin lispro should be drawn into the syringe first, mixed with the long-acting insulin, and injected immediately after mixing. Patients using insulin lispro perceive an improvement in their well-being and quality of life due to flexible injection times and less frequent hypoglycemic reactions. Insulin lispro is believed to be suitable for patients using insulin infusion pumps. CONCLUSIONS: Insulin lispro is equipotent to human insulin and has a much more rapid onset and shorter duration of action than human insulin does, which may reduce the risk of hypoglycemia. In addition, insulin lispro improves the dosing convenience for patients with diabetes and provides a more natural control of blood glucose concentrations. Insulin lispro is a useful new agent in the treatment of diabetes mellitus.

Author(s):  
Pratik Choudhary ◽  
Stephanie A. Amiel

Hypoglycaemia (low blood glucose concentration) is the most important acute complication of the pharmacological treatment of diabetes mellitus. Low blood glucose impairs brain (and, potentially, cardiac) function. The brain has minimal endogenous stores of energy, with small amounts of glycogen in astroglial cells. The brain is therefore largely dependent on circulating glucose as the substrate to fuel cerebral metabolism and support cognitive performance. If blood glucose levels fall sufficiently, cognitive dysfunction is inevitable. In health, efficient glucose sensing and counterregulatory mechanisms exist to prevent clinically significant hypoglycaemia. These are impaired by diabetes and by its therapies. Patients with diabetes rank fear of hypoglycaemia as highly as fear of chronic complications such as nephropathy or retinopathy (1). Fear of hypoglycaemia, hypoglycaemia itself and attempts to avoid hypoglycaemia limit the degree to which glycaemic control can be intensified to reduce the risk of chronic complications of diabetes both for type 1 and type 2 diabetes.


Diabetes mellitus is a metabolic issue it is brought about by a flat out or relative absence of insulin that, among different outcomes, increments in plasma glucose fixation related to change hyperglycemia and unsettling influence of lipid digestion, starch digestion, additionally protein digestion. Glipizide, a secondgen sulfonylurea, is utilized with diet to bring down blood glucose in patients with diabetes mellitus type II. The essential method of activity of glipizide in exploratory creatures seems, by all accounts, to be the incitement of insulin emission from the beta cells of pancreatic islet tissue and is in this way reliant on working -cells in the pancreatic islets. In human's glipizide seems to bring down the blood glucose intensely by invigorating the arrival of insulin from the pancreas, an impact subordinate after working -cells in the pancreatic islets. In man, incitement of insulin discharge by glipizide because of a feast is undoubtedly vital. Fasting insulin levels are not raised even on long haul glipizide organization, yet the postprandial insulin reaction keeps on being upgraded after at any rate a half year of treatment.


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