Fear of needles and the burden associated with multiple daily injections remain among the most significant barriers to initiating and maintaining insulin therapy. Inhaled human insulin (Exubera® (insulin human (rDNA origin)) Inhalation Powder) is a novel, rapid-acting, insulin formulation administered by inhalation before meals. An extensive clinical trial program including studies for up to two years demonstrated the efficacy and safety profile of Exubera in the treatment of both type 1 and type 2 diabetes.
Fear of needles and the burden associated with multiple daily injections remain among the most significant barriers to initiating and maintaining insulin therapy. Inhaled human insulin (Exubera® (insulin human (rDNA origin)) Inhalation Powder) is a novel, rapid-acting, insulin formulation administered by inhalation before meals. An extensive clinical trial program including studies for up to two years demonstrated the efficacy and safety profile of Exubera in the treatment of both type 1 and type 2 diabetes. As a non-invasive alternative to subcutaneous insulin, Exubera is also associated with increased patient acceptance and treatment satisfaction. Thus, the availability of Exubera offers the potential to provide improved blood glucose control. Over the long term, better glycemic control has the potential to reduce the risk of costly diabetic complications.
Current Burden of Diabetes
Diabetes mellitus is a major contributor to the global disease burden with the number of patients growing on an epidemic scale. An estimated 194 million people worldwide are currently affected with diabetes, a figure the World Health Organization (WHO) expects to rise to 366 million cases by 2030.1,2 Major landmark clinical studies, such as the UK Prospective Diabetes Study (UKPDS) and the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT), have shown that improvement in blood glucose control reduces the risk of development of diabetes-related complications.3-5 It follows that the longer a person lives with uncontrolled diabetes the greater the risk of developing vascular complications, including retinopathy, end-stage renal disease, neuropathy and coronary heart disease.3-5 Debilitating to the individual, such complications are also expensive to treat. Indeed, the significant majority of the economic healthcare burden of diabetes relates to the treatment and consequences of diabetic complications.6 The worldwide diabetes-related annual healthcare costs alone have been estimated to be as much as US$286 billion, accounting for between 2.5% and 15% of a country’s healthcare expenditure.1,7 Diabetes is also associated with significant indirect costs due to work and productivity losses, disability, and premature mortality.7 The health benefits of maintaining tight blood glucose control in diabetes are well established. However, despite current treatment options and the widespread adoption of stringent clinical management guidelines, most people with diabetes are not achieving optimal blood glucose control, and are at ongoing risk of serious complications.8 Injectable Insulin Therapy
Insulin has long been established as a therapy for controlling blood glucose in people with diabetes and is the most effective glucose lowering agent available to date. Individuals with type 1 diabetes require insulin replacement therapy throughout their lives. Type 2 diabetes is a progressive disease normally resulting from a combination of insulin resistance and progressive betacell dysfunction, and is treated by most physicians in a stepwise manner.9 Management of type 2 diabetes typically commences with diet and lifestyle interventions, eventually followed by the addition of a single oral anti-diabetic drug and then a combination of oral drugs. However, oral therapy is often not sufficient to achieve appropriate glycemic control. Recent data from the Kaiser Permanente database suggested that only half the patients achieve targeted glycemic control when using the combination of sulfonylurea and metformin. Furthermore, even when successful, these patients maintained target control for less than one year and continued suboptimal therapy for 2–3 years before transitioning onto insulin.10 Therefore, most people with type 2 diabetes will eventually require intensive insulin therapy to achieve adequate blood glucose control.11
The need for multiple daily insulin injections is burdensome to diabetes sufferers. Typical patient concerns relate to fear of needles and injection pain, difficulty with administration, and concerns about side effects, complications and disease progression.12,13 These concerns contribute to the barriers to treatment acceptance.This was suitably demonstrated in one study by Hauber and colleagues in which people with type 2 diabetes appeared willing to sacrifice adequate blood glucose control in favor of reducing the number of daily injections.14 Moreover, around one-quarter of people with diabetes reportedly refuse insulin therapy once it is prescribed.15,16 Furthermore, physicians also delay prescribing insulin therapy.12,13,17 As a result, insulin use may be delayed for years in many patients with type 2 diabetes. In fact, one recent study demonstrated that more than half of the patients who no longer achieve glycemic control with oral medications wait five years or more to initiate subcutaneous (SC) insulin therapy.18 There is a need to decrease the above risks, improve the long-term health outcomes of diabetes sufferers and lessen the economic burden of disease, and to achieve these aims, additional, non-invasive, insulin-based therapeutic options could be helpful.Inhaled Human Insulin — Clinical Efficacy and Safety
Efforts to develop non-invasive alternatives to injectable insulin began soon after the discovery of insulin. Until recently, issues with insulin bioavailability and the technology required for delivering insulin by alternative routes have hampered progress.19 The pulmonary route is the most widely researched non-invasive alternative to SC administration and offers the greatest potential for systemic insulin delivery. Its advantages include a large absorptive surface, high permeability, and an extensive vascular network permitting rapid passage of insulin from the alveoli into the systemic circulation.20 Key to the development of novel inhalation systems has been the improvement of insulin formulations and inhalers, such that the inhaled insulin particles are optimally sized for efficient delivery into the deep lung.
Exubera is the first inhaled insulin product to be approved in the EU and US for the treatment of adults with type 1 or type 2 diabetes. It is the first noninvasive alternative to multiple daily insulin injections since the introduction of insulin 80 years ago. Exubera is a fast-acting, dry-powder formulation of human insulin intended for use before meals. It is inhaled into the lungs via the mouth through a simple-to-use, mechanical hand-held device that operates without batteries. The pharmacokinetic profile of Exubera mimics the normal physiological pattern of insulin secretion in response to a meal, with an initial rise in plasma insulin levels similar to rapid-acting insulin analogs, and a duration of action that is comparable to SC regular insulin (see Figure 1).21 Therefore, Exubera administered 10 minutes before meals provides postmeal glucose control. Exubera has been evaluated in clinical trials including over 2,700 adults with type 1 and type 2 diabetes, with some treated for up to seven years. In each trial, efficacy has been assessed using glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) as the primary outcome. Comparisons with SC regimens combining rapid-acting regular insulin and long-acting insulins in subjects with type 1 diabetes have shown that Exubera provides similar glycemic control to SC premeal injections as part of a conventional or intensive insulin regimen.22-25
Source: Adapted with permission from Rave K, Bott S, Heinemann L, et al., “Time-action profile of inhaled insulin in comparison with subcutaneously injected insulin lispro and regular human insulin”, Diabetes Care (2005), 28: pp. 1077–1082.
In type 2 diabetes, Exubera has been compared with oral anti-diabetic agents and with a SC rapid-acting insulin regimen.When used as an early pharmacological intervention, Exubera achieves blood glucose control in subjects with type 2 diabetes sub-optimally controlled on diet and exercise.26 Similarly, two studies showed that, in patients uncontrolled on a single oral agent (HbA1c >9.5%), addition of Exubera significantly improves glycemic control compared with adjunctive oral agent therapy.27,28 Furthermore, in subjects failing dual oral anti-diabetic therapy, Exubera provides greater improvements in blood glucose control than continued oral therapy, either administered alone or in addition to existing oral therapy (see Figure 2).29 Exubera is also effective as part of a conventional insulin regimen, achieving levels of blood glucose control comparable to subcutaneous insulin injections.30,31
Source: Rosenstock J, Zinman B, Murphy L J, et al., “Inhaled insulin improves glycemic control when substituted for or added to oral combination therapy in type 2 diabetes”, Ann Intern Med (2005), 143: pp. 549–558.
Secondary outcome assessments of post-meal and fasting glucose concentrations and weight gain are also recognized as important measures of diabetes control. The Exubera clinical development program has also demonstrated equivalence of reduction of post-meal glucose concentrations and improvement in fasting glucose levels compared with SC insulins in people with type 1 or type 2 diabetes.24,25,30 Less weight gain has also been reported with Exubera compared with SC insulin.30
The safety profile of Exubera has been extensively studied. Adverse events throughout the clinical development program were generally mild-to-moderate in severity, and discontinuation rates were low.As with all insulin products, hypoglycemia was the most commonly reported adverse event with severity and incidence similar to those observed with SC insulin therapy.24,25,30 As expected, the incidence of hypoglycemia was higher with adjunctive Exubera compared with adjunctive oral antidiabetic therapy.26-29 Cough of mild-to-moderate severity has been observed at a higher frequency in subjects receiving Exubera compared with SC insulin. Cough generally occurred within seconds to minutes of INH administration, was rarely productive and decreased with time on therapy.24-27,30 Less than 1% of trial subjects discontinued Exubera due to cough. Small but consistent treatment group differences in lung function tests (forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) and diffusing capacity of carbon monoxide (DLCO)) favoring the comparator therapy have been observed with Exubera. As well as being small, these changes occurred early after treatment initiation, were non-progressive for up to two years, and were reversible following discontinuation (see Figure 3).26,27,30,32 Lung function monitoring is recommended prior to Exubera initiation and at regular intervals thereafter, in order to detect any unexpected increased effect.
Patient Satisfaction with Treatment
A feature of Exubera across several clinical studies is its association with greater patient satisfaction compared with SC insulin in both type 1 and type 2 diabetes.24,30,33- 36 Subjects receiving Exubera reported a greater improvement in global treatment satisfaction, convenience/ease of use, and social comfort after one year of therapy compared with those who remain on subcutaneous insulin. Exubera has also been associated with significant improvements in some quality of life scores compared with SC insulin.35,36
Furthermore, patients commonly prefer Exubera to SC insulin. In one study, when subjects with type 1 or type 2 diabetes initially assigned to treatment with Exubera or SC insulin were allowed to select a regimen for on-going treatment, most Exubera-treated subjects (85%) elected to continue with Exubera. In contrast, most subjects treated initially with SC insulin choose to switch to Exubera (75%).37 A further randomized, controlled study of subjects with type 2 diabetes inadequately controlled on diet and/or oral anti-diabetic drugs explored the issue of patient acceptance.38 In this study, the availability of Exubera as a treatment choice resulted in a three-fold greater number of subjects opting for a treatment that included any insulin compared with subjects offered treatments other than Exubera. The Potential Role of Exubera in the Management of Diabetes
A non-invasive alternative to injectable insulin would be a welcome addition to the therapeutic armamentarium in type 1 and type 2 diabetes for both patients and physicians alike. Exubera has the potential to change the way diabetes is treated by helping to overcome the therapeutic barriers that are associated with administration by injection, thereby increasing patient acceptance of insulin therapy. The clinical trial programme supports this view given that patients reported greater overall preference and treatment satisfaction with Exubera compared to remaining uncontrolled on oral anti-diabetic drugs, or compared to insulin injections.The increased willingness to switch to a more appropriate therapy could lead to the earlier initiation and intensification of insulin therapy, particularly in those patients with type 2 diabetes failing on oral anti-diabetic drugs. A potential outcome of earlier insulin treatment is shorter periods of poor blood glucose control, or conversely, improved blood glucose control in the short and the long term.Studies such as the UKPDS and DCCT lend support to early and intensive pharmacological intervention. In this regard, insulin, more so than oral anti-diabetic drugs, is effective at controlling post-meal escalations in blood glucose, which have been linked to increased cardiovascular risk.39-41 Clearly, the choice of treatment and the decision when to initiate insulin treatment in particular, could have long-term implications on health outcomes for the patient and healthcare budgets. By offering a non-invasive alternative to injectable insulin, Exubera may facilitate early and intensive recourse to insulin therapy, which may have positive benefits for patient care and healthcare expenditure.
(*N at baseline and at end of 104 weeks of therapy). [Adapted with permission from Brain JD, “Unlocking the opportunity of tight glycemic control. Inhaled insulin: safety”, Diabetes Obes. Metab. (2005), 7 (Supp l1): pp. S14-18.]
Concluding Remarks
The availability of Exubera has the potential to increase insulin acceptance, encouraging earlier initia-tion and intensification of insulin-based therapeutic regimens, and therefore improving blood glucose control. Over the long term, improved glycemic control may lead to reduced risk of diabetes complications and better health outcomes for patients, resulting in reduction in the economic burden of diabetes.