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View Full Version : hey check this new diabetic ll drug out its not insulin


hillbilly
02-14-2006, 05:34 PM
my moms friend just told her about this new injection drug out
will make you loose weight stable you sugar
let me know what you think of this




Description of Medical Areas

About the FDA Approved Listings

Drugs Approved by the FDA
Drug Name: Byetta (exenatide)
The following information is obtained from various newswires, published medical journal articles, and medical conference presentations.



Company: Amylin/Eli Lilly
Approval Status: Approved April, 2005
Treatment for: Type 2 Diabetes



General Information
Byetta (exenatide), derived from a compound found in the saliva of the Gila monster, a large lizard native to the southwestern US, is a functional analog of Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 (GLP-1), a naturally occuring peptide which enhances insulin secretion in response to elevated plasma glucose levels. By mimicking the function of GLP-1, the drug helps more strongly activate this pathway to improve glycemic control.

Byetta is specifically indicated as adjunctive therapy to improve glycemic control in patients with Type 2 diabetes mellitus who are taking metformin, a sulfonylurea, or a combination of both, but have not achieved adequate glycemic control.

Byetta is supplied as as a sterile solution for subcutaneous injection. The recommended initial dose is 5 mcg twice daily, anytime within the 60 minute period prior to the monring and evening meal. This dose may be escalated to 10 mcg twice daily after 1 month, based on response

Clinical Results
FDA Approval
Approval of Byetta was based on 3 double-blind, placebo-controlled safety and efficacy clinical trials, which enrolled a combined 1446 subjects with type 2 diabetes. Each trial combined the two now-approved doses of Byetta or placebo with existing therapy: with metformin in one trial (336 total subjects), with sulfonylurea in the second trial (377 total subjects), and with both drugs in the third (733 total subjects). The primary endpoint in all 3 trials was change from baseline in HbA1c levels at 30 weeks, a measure of long term glycemic control. Secondary efficacy endpoints were the proportion of subjects achiving HbA1c levels at or below 7% (a level considered "normal") at week 30, and mean change in body weight at week 30. The addition of Byetta was seen to reduce mean HbA1c levels in combination with metformin (+0.1% for placebo vs. -0.4% at 5 mcg, p<0.05; -0.8% at 10 mcg, p<0.0001), sulfonylurea (+0.1% vs. -0.5%, p<0.05; -0.9%, p<0.0001), and both drugs (+0.2%, vs. -0.6%, p<0.0001; -0.8%, p<0.0001). The mean proportion of subjects achiving HbA1c levels at or below 7% was significant for all Byetta groups in all 3 trials, and subjects receiving Byetta achieved significantly greater weight loss in all trial groups except the 5 mcg dose group in combination with sulfonylurea, which trended towards improvement. These results indicated that Byetta in combination metformin, sulfonylurea or both produced superior recudtions in fasting and post-prandial plasma glucose levels, brought a greater portion of subjects into normal glucose ranges, and produced greater reductions in mean body weight than either or both drugs alone.

Ongoing Study Commitments


Deferred pediatric study under PREA for the treatment of type 2 diabetes in adolescents ages 12 through 16 years, who have not achieved adequate glycemic control on metformin, a sulfonylurea, or a combination of metformin and a sulfonylurea, to evaluate the pharmacokinetics and relevant pharmacodynamic effects of different subcutaneous doses of the drug.
Protocol submission due: July 29, 2005
Study start: January 31, 2006
Final report submission due: December 31, 2007

Human in vivo drug interaction study between exenatide and a combination oral contraceptive (e.g., ethinyl estradiol plus norethindrone) to define the effect of timing of the exenatide injection relative to the administration of the oral contraceptive on the bioavailability of the components of the oral contraceptive.
Protocol submission due: July 29, 2005
Study start: January 31, 2006
Final report submission due: January 31, 2007

Side Effects
Adverse events associated with the use of Byetta may include, but are not limited to, the following:


Nausea
Vomiting
Diarrhea
Jittery sensation
Dizziness
Headache
Dyspepsia
In addition, instances of hypoglycemia occurred in all 3 pivotal trials. These events occurred roughly as often as with placebo in combination with metformin, but occurred more often than placebo when Byetta was co-administered with either sulfonylurea alone or the metformin/sulfonylurea combination. Most episodes of hypoglycemia were mild-to-moderate, and resolvable with carbohydrate supplementation.

Mechanism of Action
Byetta is a functional analog of the human incretin Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 (GLP-1) . Incretins enhance glucose-dependent insulin secretion and exhibit other antihyperglycemic actions following their release into the circulation from the gut. The GLP-1 system increases insulin secretion only in the presence of elevated plasma glucose levels, avoiding inappropriately high insulin levels during fasting. The drug also moderates peak serum glucagon levels during hyperglycemic periods following meals, but does not interfere with glucagon release in response to hypoglycemia. Secondary effects of drug administration reduces the rate of gastric emptying and decreases food intake, mitigating the potential severity of hyperglycemic events after meals.

Literature References
Defronzo RA, Ratner RE, Han J, Kim DD, Fineman MS, Baron AD. Effects of exenatide (exendin-4) on glycemic control and weight over 30 weeks in metformin-treated patients with type 2 diabetes. Diabetes Care 2005 May;28(5):1092-100.

Calara F, Taylor K, Han J, Zabala E, Carr EM, Wintle M, Fineman M. A randomized, open-label, crossover study examining the effect of injection site on bioavailability of exenatide (synthetic exendin-4). Clinical Therapeutics 2005 Feb;27(2):210-5.

Nauck MA, Meier JJ. Glucagon-like peptide 1 and its derivatives in the treatment of diabetes. Regulatory Peptides 2005 Jun 15;128(2):135-48.

Gedulin BR, Nikoulina SE, Smith PA, Gedulin G, Nielsen LL, Baron AD, Parkes DG, Young AA. Exenatide (exendin-4) improves insulin sensitivity and {beta}-cell mass in insulin-resistant obese fa/fa Zucker rats independent of glycemia and body weight. Endocrinology 2005 Apr;146(4):2069-76.

Additional Information
For additional information regarding Byetta or Type 2 diabetes mellitus, please visit the Byetta web page.

bsr2002
02-14-2006, 06:39 PM
My doctor uses it on herself and she's Type I. She put two of my friends on it and they are Type II. I asked one of them what they thought about it and she told me that anything she ate that was remotely oily would make her sick. Though her blood sugars have een kept in check so far. Her fasting GL would be in the low 100s now it's been going down to double didgets like 89 and 85. I'm thinking about it myself.

Harold
02-14-2006, 08:57 PM
Yea! If you would put in Symlin, for type 1's, or Byetta, for type 2's into the search you will find previous posts about it. You will also see that some are already using them. The Incretin hormones are just another element in the blood glucose control system that medicine has come to reconize. I am sure there will be others from different organs to be discovered yet. Someday when they have discovered all of them and have figured out out how the control system works we will be well on the way to a cure. Untill then the stem cell and genetic cures do not have a chance of curing this desease.

hillbilly
02-15-2006, 06:13 AM
My doctor uses it on herself and she's Type I. She put two of my friends on it and they are Type II. I asked one of them what they thought about it and she told me that anything she ate that was remotely oily would make her sick. Though her blood sugars have een kept in check so far. Her fasting GL would be in the low 100s now it's been going down to double didgets like 89 and 85. I'm thinking about it myself.

what was her readings b4
i'm thinking about calling my doc. and trying it see if it will get me right

bsr2002
02-17-2006, 06:18 AM
what was her readings b4
i'm thinking about calling my doc. and trying it see if it will get me right
Har fasting GL would run around 110 to 120. Now they have been running in the double didgets like around 79 to 85. :)