A randomized clinical trial comparing the effect of basal insulin and inhaled mealtime insulin on glucose variability and oxidative stress

S. E. Siegelaar, W. Kulik, H. van Lenthe, R. Mukherjee, J. B. L. Hoekstra, J. H. DeVries

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

20 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

To assess the effect of three times daily mealtime inhaled insulin therapy compared with once daily basal insulin glargine therapy on 72-h glucose profiles, glucose variability and oxidative stress in type 2 diabetes patients. In an inpatient crossover study, 40 subjects with type 2 diabetes were randomized to receive 9 days of inhaled insulin three times daily before meals or 9 days of glargine administered in the morning before breakfast in a randomized order. During the last 72 h in each phase, glucose was measured with continuous glucose monitoring. Activation of oxidative stress was measured by determining the 15(S)-8-iso-PGF(2 alpha)-secretion in 24-h urine samples. Inhaled insulin improved overall and postprandial glucose control significantly better than insulin glargine (p <0.0001). There was a trend towards a greater reduction in glucose variability (8-9%) in the inhaled group [p = 0.1430 and p = 0.3298 for mean amplitude of glycaemic excursions (MAGEs) and mean of daily differences respectively]. Oxidative stress, estimated by determining the urinary isoprostane excretion (15(S)-8-iso-PGF(2 alpha)), was equally reduced from baseline by both treatments. No correlation was found between glucose variability and oxidative stress in both groups. This study showed a mealtime insulin approach to improve glycaemic control more than a basal insulin approach. These findings indicate also that lowering glucose using insulin treatment lowers oxidative stress over time, at least for the study period of 9 days, in type 2 diabetes patients. Contrary to earlier data, we found no correlation between glucose variability (MAGE) and oxidative stress (15(S)-8-iso-PGF(2 alpha)) in this study
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)709-714
JournalDiabetes, obesity & metabolism
Volume11
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2009

Cite this