Equipotency of insulin glargine and regular human insulin on glucose disposal in healthy subjects following intravenous infusion
Tóm tắt
The absolute glucose disposal of insulin glargine (Lantus)
was compared to that of regular human insulin in healthy
subjects (n=20) using the euglycaemic clamp technique in a
single-dose, double-blind, randomized, two-way crossover design.
Subjects received 30-minute intravenous infusions of insulin
glargine (0.1 IU/kg) or human insulin (0.1 IU/kg) and a 20%
glucose solution infused at a variable rate to maintain
euglycaemia at the subject’s baseline glucose level. At equal
baseline blood glucose levels (4.42 mmol/l [range, 4.00–5.16
mmol/l] and 4.42 mmol/l [range, 4.01–4.94 mmol/l],
respectively), the area under the glucose infusion rate (GIR)
time curves from 0–6 hours (AUC(0–6h))
was within the bioequivalence range (insulin glargine, 663.92
mg/kg; human insulin, 734.85 mg/kg). Both the time to maximum
GIR and the suppression of serum C-peptide were similar with
insulin glargine and human insulin. The resulting maximum serum
insulin concentrations (Cmax) were 151.16
µIU/ml and 202.23 µIU/ml, and the time to
Cmax (Tmax) was 30
minutes (the duration of the infusion). The observed differences
in the Cmax (the mean value for insulin
glargine was about 25% lower than that of human insulin) could
be explained by lower cross-reactivity of insulin glargine in
the human insulin radioimmunoassay. The employed intravenous
route, though definitely not the intended clinical use of
insulin glargine, provided the clinical evidence in healthy
subjects that on a molar basis insulin glargine is equipotent to
regular human insulin regarding glucose disposal.