Initiating Insulin Therapy in Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract
OBJECTIVE—Safety and efficacy of biphasic insulin aspart 70/30 (BIAsp 70/30, prebreakfast and presupper) were compared with once-daily insulin glargine in type 2 diabetic subjects inadequately controlled on oral antidiabetic drugs (OADs). RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—This 28-week parallel-group study randomized 233 insulin-naive patients with HbA1c values ≥8.0% on >1,000 mg/day metformin alone or in combination with other OADs. Metformin was adjusted up to 2,550 mg/day before insulin therapy was initiated with 5–6 units BIAsp 70/30 twice daily or 10–12 units glargine at bedtime and titrated to target blood glucose (80–110 mg/dl) by algorithm-directed titration. RESULTS—A total of 209 subjects completed the study. At study end, the mean HbA1c value was lower in the BIAsp 70/30 group than in the glargine group (6.91 ± 1.17 vs. 7.41 ± 1.24%, P < 0.01). The HbA1c reduction was greater in the BIAsp 70/30 group than in the glargine group (−2.79 ± 0.11 vs. −2.36 ± 0.11%, respectively; P < 0.01), especially for subjects with baseline HbA1c >8.5% (−3.13 ± 1.63 vs. −2.60 ± 1.50%, respectively; P < 0.05). More BIAsp 70/30–treated subjects reached target HbA1c values than glargine-treated subjects (HbA1c ≤6.5%: 42 vs. 28%, P < 0.05; HbA1c 8.5%.