Efficacy and adverse effects of nateglinide in early type 2 diabetes. Comparison with voglibose in a cross-over study.

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Kurebayashi S, Watada H, Tanaka Y, Kawasumi M, Kawamori R, Hirose T

Efficacy and adverse effects of nateglinide in early type 2 diabetes. Comparison with voglibose in a cross-over study.

Endocr J. 2006 Apr;53(2):213-7.

PubMed ID
16618980 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

An open-label prospective cross-over trial was performed to compare the efficacy and adverse effects of nateglinide with those of voglibose on Japanese early type 2 diabetes (who were oral hypoglycemic agent naive and whose HbA(1C) levels were between 7.0 and 7.9% before treatment). Fourteen patients received 270 mg/day of nateglinide and 15 patients received 0.6 mg/day of voglibose. After 12 weeks of either therapy, the drugs were switched and treatment was continued for another 12 weeks. After 3-month treatment with each drug, HbA(1C) value decreased significantly (baseline HbA(1C) 7.24 +/- 0.42%, 6.70 +/- 0.47% with nateglinide: p<0.01, 6.93 +/- 0.62% with voglibose: p<0.05) but the difference in the effect between nateglinide and voglibose was not significant (p = 0.121). Symptoms related to hypoglycemia (e.g., increased appetite, palpitation, sweating, tremor) were scarcely observed with either voglibose or nateglinide treatments. Abdominal fullness/borborygmi was frequently reported, with variable severity, by patients on voglibose but this was absent or mild in those on nateglinide. After completion of both arms of the study, more patients favored nateglinide than voglibose. Our results suggest that nateglinide is an effective and safe drug in the treatment of early type 2 diabetes, similar to voglibose.

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