Friday, 29 March, 2024
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Resistance to prescribing cheap diabetes drug

Few doctors are prescribing a low-cost drug that has been proven effective in preventing the onset of diabetes, according to a University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) study. The study found that only 3.7% of US adults with pre-diabetes were prescribed metformin during a recent three-year period.

Metformin and lifestyle changes both can prevent the onset of diabetes, but people often struggle to adopt healthier habits, according to Dr Tannaz Moin, the study's lead author and an assistant professor of medicine in the division of endocrinology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and at VA Greater Los Angeles.

"Diabetes is prevalent, but pre-diabetes is even more prevalent and we have evidence-based therapies like metformin that are very safe and that work," Moin said. "Metformin is rarely being used for diabetes prevention among people at risk for developing it. This is something that patients and doctors need to be talking about and thinking about."

The American Diabetes Association in 2008 added metformin to its annual guidelines for use in diabetes prevention for those at very high risk who are under age 60, are severely obese, or have a history of gestational diabetes. Under the guidelines, metformin may also be considered for patients whose blood sugar is above normal but not yet in the diabetes range.

The researchers examined data from 2010 to 2012 from United Healthcare, the largest private insurer in the US, for a national sample of 17,352 adults aged 19 to 58 with pre-diabetes. They also found: The prevalence of metformin prescriptions was 7.8% for severely obese patients; metformin prescriptions were nearly twice as high for women (4.8%) as for men (2.8%); among people with pre-diabetes, the prevalence of prescriptions for obese individuals was 6.6%, versus 3.5% for non-obese people; among people who had pre-diabetes and two other chronic diseases, 4.2% received prescriptions for metformin, versus 2.8% of people with pre-diabetes and no other chronic diseases.

The reasons for the under-use of metformin are not clear, the researchers write, but they could include a lack of knowledge of the 2002 Diabetes Prevention Programme Study, which showed that both lifestyle changes and metformin use can prevent or delay progression to diabetes among those with pre-diabetes, the fact that the drug does not have US Federal Drug Administration approval for pre-diabetes and reluctance by patients and doctors to "medicalise" pre-diabetes.

"Identifying more effective ways to help people avoid diabetes is essential to individuals' lives and to society as a whole, which is why it was important to us to support this research," said Dr Sam Ho, a co-author of the study and chief medical officer of Minnetonka, Minnesota-based United Healthcare.

Potential limitations to the study included a lack of access to data on participation in lifestyle programmes; possible mis-classification of pre-diabetes and metformin use; the fact that the analysis focused on adults with commercial insurance, which could make the findings inapplicable to uninsured or older adults; and the researchers' inability to independently verify patients' eligibility to receive metformin under the American Diabetes Association guidelines.

[link url="http://newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/drug-that-can-prevent-the-onset-of-diabetes-is-rarely-used"]University of California Los Angeles material[/link]
[link url="http://annals.org/article.aspx?articleid=2275385"]Annals of Internal Medicine abstract[/link]

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