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A New Treatment Option for Type 1s and Insulin-Using Type 2s
On March 16, 2005, Amylin Pharmaceuticals, Inc., of San Diego, California, announced it had received FDA approval for Symlin (pramlintide acetate) injections to be used in conjunction with insulin to treat diabetes.
“Symlin provides a new option for many patients who, despite their best efforts with insulin therapy, continue to struggle to achieve their glucose control targets,” says Robert E. Ratner, MD, an investigator for the Symlin clinical studies, a vice president for scientific affairs at MedStar Research Institute and a professor of medicine at the Georgetown University Medical School.
What Is Symlin?
Symlin is a synthetic analog of human amylin, which is a naturally occurring hormone made in the beta cells of the pancreas, which also make insulin. Type 1s and insulin-using type 2s have amylin deficiency because they have destroyed or damaged beta cells. This, according to Steven Edelman, MD, an endocrinologist from San Diego, California, results in reduced secretion of both insulin and amylin after meals.
Symlin is groundbreaking for type 1s and insulin-using type 2s because it “mimics” certain physiological effects of amylin.
In short, Symlin replaces amylin deficiency.
“[Symlin] decreases the accelerated rate of gastric emptying, which is a characteristic of amylin deficiency,” says Harold Lebovitz, MD, professor of medicine at the division of endocrinology and metabolism/diabetes at the State University of New York Health Sciences Center in Brooklyn, New York. “There is an increase in satiety which reduces food intake, a decrease in [after-meal] glucagon secretion and a decrease in [after-meal] glucose excursions.”
In addition to having fewer blood glucose fluctuations and improving their control, Edelman says that patients taking Symlin will also lose weight.
“Normally, patients gain weight when they intensify their control,” says Edelman.
How Does It Work?
According to Amylin, Symlin is to be used at mealtime in patients with type 2 or type 1 diabetes who have failed to achieve desired glucose control despite optimal insulin therapy.
Symlin is a self-administered injection given prior to meals. According to Lebovitz, therapy starts with a low dose (15 micrograms in type 1s and 30 micrograms in type 2s) and titrated slowly to 60 micrograms in type 1s and 120 microgram in type 2s.
Edelman says that Symlin will eventually come in a pen delivery system, but for now it is available only in a vial. Patients are instructed to self-administer mealtime doses of Symlin subcutaneously using an insulin syringe including the correct “units” dosage conversion for the Symlin dosages in micrograms.
It is important to note that Symlin has a different chemistry (pH) than insulin; therefore, mixing it in the same syringe is not advisable.
What If Your Existing Regimen Is Working Well?
Symlin is indicated for use at mealtime for patients “who have failed to achieve desired blood glucose control despite optimal therapy.”
So what does this mean if your glucose control is successful with optimal insulin therapy?
“If it isn’t broke, don’t fix it,” says Edelman.
Symlin is not for people who are achieving their treatment targets. However, a March 1999 study that appeared in Diabetes Care found that approximately 74 percent of patients using insulin are not achieving A1Cs of less than 7%. For these people, Symlin is certainly a treatment option.
“If the A1C is good and the person’s blood sugar levels are not bouncing around all over the place and no weight needs to be lost, then you do not need Symlin,” says Edelman.
It is estimated that Symlin will be commercially available in June 2005. For more information, log on to www.amylin.com or call (858) 552-2200.
What Is Symlin and What Does It Do?
How Is Symlin Used?
When using Symlin in conjunction with your insulin regimen, Harold Lebovitz, MD, says that the likely clinical consequences are
Important Safety Information Regarding Symlin
Source: Amylin Pharmaceuticals
Amylin on a Roll
Type 2 Drug Also Approved
Continuing its momentum, on April 29, 2005, Amylin Pharmaceuticals also received FDA approval for Byetta (exenatide).
Indicated for people with type 2 diabetes “who have not achieved adequate control on metformin and/or a sulfonylurea,” Byetta is taken as a subcutaneous injection twice a day in combination with existing oral medications.
According to Amylin, which is co-marketing the drug with Eli Lilly and Company, Byetta (pronounced bye-A-tuh) is the first in a new class of medicines known as incretin mimetics. An incretin is a hormone released by the gut into the bloodstream in response to food. Incretin hormones help regulate blood glucose levels in the body.
Diabetes Health will do a longer article on Byetta in its July 2005 issue.
Practical Advice for Patients On Symlin Therapy
By Steven Edelman, MD
1. Start with a low dose and titrate slowly.
Symlin can cause nausea, anorexia and vomiting, especially in people with
type 1 diabetes. It is extremely important not to rush the dose titration. In
patients with type 1 diabetes, start with a mealtime dose of 15 micrograms,
which is equivalent to 2.5 units on a traditional insulin syringe. If after one
week there are no side effects, then it is safe to advance by 15 micrograms. If,
on the other hand, the patient is experiencing nausea or other gastrointestinal
side effects, do not increase the dose of Symlin, and wait until the side effects
dissipate altogether. Patients with type 2 diabetes experience significantly
fewer side effects, so the titration can start at 30 micrograms and you can
titrate more quickly if the patient is asymptomatic.
2. Take Symlin as you start eating the main part of your meal.
Symlin seems to produce its satiety effect within 10 to 15 minutes after
injection, although each patient’s response may vary. If the meal starts with
an appetizer or soup and salad, the patient can consider waiting until the
main course is served. This recommendation comes from feedback given
during the clinical trials. If Symlin is taken too early and the pre-meal insulin
dose has already been given, the risk of after-meal hypoglycemia may go up.
3. Decrease the amount of rapid-acting insulin analog (Humalog,
NovoLog or Apidra) by 30 to 50 percent when initiating Symlin.
This precaution is especially true for patients with type 1 diabetes. Symlin
works to not only reduce glucose levels; it may also lead to a reduction in food
intake greater than anticipated by a patient who has recently started taking
Symlin. Further adjustments of the insulin dose either up or down should be
based on home glucose monitoring results and experience with Symlin.
4. Timing of the insulin dose is important.
Many patients who have experience with Symlin take their rapid-acting
insulin analog as they approach the end of their meal. The reason is that
they will know how much and what types of food they will be eating, so the
insulin dose calculation using carbohydrate counting or other means will be
more accurate. In addition, because Symlin delays gastric emptying, the peak
in glucose after meals may overlap with the peak action of the rapid-acting
insulin analogs when given a little later than the beginning of the meal.
5. Be prepared to be satisfied sooner when initiating Symlin.
Satiety is the feeling of being satisfied. Symlin-induced satiety is best
described as a lack of desire to continue eating because you feel that you
have had enough food. It is not feeling “stuffed,” as many people
feel after overeating on Thanksgiving. It is simply the lack of desire to eat
any more. Many subjects who have used Symlin stop eating second and third helpings
and take home doggie bags with restaurant leftovers on a regular basis. Many
subjects have reported struggling to convince themselves to take their Symlin
dose when dining at an expensive or all-you-can-eat restaurant.
Amylin and Insulin: The Beta Cell Partner Hormones
Making Sense of Some Words That End With ‘lin’
Amylin reduces the amount of glucose that shows up in the bloodstream by reducing the amount of food consumed. In turn, this prevents glucagon (which leads to glucose production) from being secreted and slows down the rate that the stomach dumps food into the small intestine. This leads to lower after-meal blood glucose values.
Insulin, on the other hand, works “on the other end,” allowing the tissues to suck up the glucose out of the bloodstream.
Symlin allows amylin and insulin to now work together “on both ends,” which allows a lower dose of insulin and, after adjustments are made, leads to fewer fluctuations and fewer occurrences of hypoglycemia.
Source: Steven Edelman, MD
Categories: A1c Test, Blood Glucose, Blood Sugar, Diabetes, Diabetes, Food, Insulin, Losing weight, Low Blood Sugar, Pens, Symlin, Syringes, Type 1 Issues, Type 2 Issues
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