02669nas a2200301 4500000000100000008004100001100001400042700001300056700001200069700001600081700001700097700001500114700001400129700001600143700001600159700001800175700001700193700001400210700001800224700001600242700001200258700001600270700001600286700002200302245009400324520193500418022001402353 2017 d1 aJi Linong1 aZhang P.1 aLi Xian1 aWu Yangfeng1 aZhu Dongshan1 aJi Jiachao1 aLu Juming1 aGuo Xiaohui1 aJia Weiping1 aWeng Jianping1 aYang Wenying1 aZou Dajin1 aZhou Zhiguang1 aPan Changyu1 aGao Yan1 aGarg Satish1 aPaul Sanjoy1 aORBIT study group00aComparative effectiveness and safety of different basal insulins in a real-world setting.3 a

AIMS: To compare glucose control and safety of different basal insulin therapies (BI, including Insulin NPH, glargine and detemir) in real-world clinical settings based on a large-scale registry study.

METHODS: In this multi-center 6-month prospective observational study, patients with type 2 diabetes (HbA1c ≥ 7%) who were uncontrolled by oral anti-diabetic drugs (OADs) and were willing to initiate BI therapy were enrolled from 209 hospitals within 8 regions of China. Type and dose of BI were at the physician's discretion and the patients' willingness. Interviews were conducted at 0 months (visit 1), 3 months (visit 2) and 6 months (visit 3). Outcomes included change in HbA1c, hypoglycemia rate and body weight from baseline at 6 months.

RESULTS: A total of 16 341 and 9002 subjects were involved in Intention-To-Treat (ITT) and per-protocol (PP) analysis, respectively. After PS regression adjustment, ITT analysis showed that reduction in HbA1c in glargine (2.2% ± 2.1%) and detemir groups (2.2% ± 2.1%) was higher than that in the NPH group (2.0% ± 2.2%) (P < .01). The detemir group had the lowest weight gain (-0.1 ± 2.9 kg) compared with the glargine (+0.1 ± 3.0 kg) and NPH (+0.3 ± 3.1 kg) groups (P < .05). The glargine group had the lowest rate of minor hypoglycaemia, while there was no difference in severe hypoglycaemia among the 3 groups. The results observed in PP analyses were consistent with those in ITT analysis.

CONCLUSION: In a real-world clinical setting in China, treatment with long-acting insulin analogues was associated with better glycaemic control, as well as less hypoglycaemia and weight gain than treatment with NPH insulin in type 2 diabetes patients. However, the clinical relevance of these observations must be interpreted with caution.

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