Abstract
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One
challenging prescribing decision in type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is when
clinicians must choose between sitagliptin and sulphonylureas as add-on to
metformin based on effectiveness. Evidence on effectiveness of sitagliptin
versus sulphonylureas as add-on to metformin was therefore systematically
searched and revealed no study evaluating "real-world" comparative
effectiveness of these treatments, particularly in older, more comorbid
individuals. To address this gap, The Health Improvement Network, UK primary
care database was used to extract a cohort of 26,844 individuals with T2DM
prescribed these treatments and four cohort studies were undertaken to
evaluate their comparative effectiveness. The first two studies demonstrated
no difference in HbA1c reduction, approximately 12 months after initiating
either treatment as add-on to metformin, however a significant comparative
weight reduction with sitagliptin in those aged 18-75 (-2.26kg 95%CI -2.48 to
-2.04) and ≥75 (-1.31kg 95%CI -1.96 to -0.66) was found. Two further studies
revealed individuals prescribed sitagliptin were 11% more likely to record an
undesirable HbA1c >58mmol/mol (Hazard Ratio 1.11 95%CI 1.06-1.16), however
nearly twice as likely to record an anti-diabetic treatment change (HR 1.98
95%CI 1.86-2.10) compared to sulphonylurea initiators. This analysis on
treatment change also highlighted an underlying inertia in both groups, as
66.4% of those prescribed sitagliptin and 83.7% prescribed sulphonylureas had
no treatment change introduced despite recording a HbA1c >58 mmol/mol.
This thesis provides "real-world" evidence that both sitagliptin and
sulphonylureas are equally effective in lowering HbA1c and achieving
glycaemic targets in a population that includes individuals aged ≥75 and with
significant comorbidity. Sitagliptin is preferable for weight reduction.
There is however, a substantial inertia in changing treatment when targets
are not met, which is greater among sulphonylurea initiators. There remains a
need to eliminate barriers preventing clinicians changing treatment when
these two add-on medications prove inadequate, and further evaluate their
longer-term comparative effectiveness.
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