TY - JOUR
T1 - Initial Antihyperglycemic Drug Therapy Among 241 327 Adults With Newly Identified Diabetes From 2005 Through 2010
T2 - A Surveillance, Prevention, and Management of Diabetes Mellitus (SUPREME-DM) Study
AU - Raebel, Marsha A.
AU - Xu, Stanley
AU - Goodrich, Glenn K.
AU - Schroeder, Emily B.
AU - Schmittdiel, Julie A.
AU - Segal, Jodi B.
AU - O'Connor, Patrick J.
AU - Nichols, Gregory A.
AU - Lawrence, Jean M.
AU - Kirchner, H. Lester
AU - Elston Lafata, Jennifer
AU - Butler, Melissa
AU - Newton, Katherine M.
AU - Steiner, John F.
N1 - Funding Information:
The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This project was supported by Grant Number R01HS019859 from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. AHRQ had no role in the design, conduct, or reporting of this work.
PY - 2013/10
Y1 - 2013/10
N2 - Background: Among adults with incident diabetes, data are lacking about first antihyperglycemic initiation and whether medication choice aligns with recommendations. Objective: To identify predictors of initiating any antihyperglycemic, and specifically sulfonylurea versus metformin. Methods: This retrospective cohort study included 241 327 patients from 11 US health systems, 2005 through 2010. Assessments included antihyperglycemic initiation within 6 months of diabetes identification, first medication initiated, and initiation predictors. Results: Only 40.3% (n = 97 350) started any antihyperglycemic; 75.2% (n = 73 221) started metformin. Glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) predicted initiating any antihyperglycemic (HbA1c >9%, relative risk [RR] = 3.94, 95% CI = 3.82, 4.07, vs HbA1c >6.5%-7%). Age modified the HbA1c effect: at higher HbA1c, likelihood of starting antihyperglycemics differed little across ages; at lower HbA1c, older patients were less likely to start antihyperglycemics (P <.001). Individuals with elevated serum creatinine (SCr) were more likely to started on sulfonylurea (SCr = 1.4-2, RR = 2.21 [2.05, 2.39]; SCr >2, RR = 2.75 [2.30, 3.29] vs normal SCr), particularly as HbA1c increased: patients with HbA1c 8%-9% and SCr >2 were 5.59 times (2.94, 10.65) more likely to start sulfonylurea versus those with HbA1c >6.5%-7% and normal SCr. Age predicted sulfonylurea initiation (20-39 years, RR = 0.87 [0.79, 0.95]; ≥80 years, RR = 2.41 [2.20, 2.65] vs 50-59 years). Conclusions: Among adults with incident diabetes, metformin was generally the first antihyperglycemic initiated. However, 59.7% did not start any antihyperglycemic at diabetes identification. HbA1c and age predict antihyperglycemic initiation; SCr and age predict sulfonylurea initiation.
AB - Background: Among adults with incident diabetes, data are lacking about first antihyperglycemic initiation and whether medication choice aligns with recommendations. Objective: To identify predictors of initiating any antihyperglycemic, and specifically sulfonylurea versus metformin. Methods: This retrospective cohort study included 241 327 patients from 11 US health systems, 2005 through 2010. Assessments included antihyperglycemic initiation within 6 months of diabetes identification, first medication initiated, and initiation predictors. Results: Only 40.3% (n = 97 350) started any antihyperglycemic; 75.2% (n = 73 221) started metformin. Glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) predicted initiating any antihyperglycemic (HbA1c >9%, relative risk [RR] = 3.94, 95% CI = 3.82, 4.07, vs HbA1c >6.5%-7%). Age modified the HbA1c effect: at higher HbA1c, likelihood of starting antihyperglycemics differed little across ages; at lower HbA1c, older patients were less likely to start antihyperglycemics (P <.001). Individuals with elevated serum creatinine (SCr) were more likely to started on sulfonylurea (SCr = 1.4-2, RR = 2.21 [2.05, 2.39]; SCr >2, RR = 2.75 [2.30, 3.29] vs normal SCr), particularly as HbA1c increased: patients with HbA1c 8%-9% and SCr >2 were 5.59 times (2.94, 10.65) more likely to start sulfonylurea versus those with HbA1c >6.5%-7% and normal SCr. Age predicted sulfonylurea initiation (20-39 years, RR = 0.87 [0.79, 0.95]; ≥80 years, RR = 2.41 [2.20, 2.65] vs 50-59 years). Conclusions: Among adults with incident diabetes, metformin was generally the first antihyperglycemic initiated. However, 59.7% did not start any antihyperglycemic at diabetes identification. HbA1c and age predict antihyperglycemic initiation; SCr and age predict sulfonylurea initiation.
KW - adult
KW - antihyperglycemic medication
KW - incident diabetes
KW - metformin
KW - newly identified diabetes
KW - sulfonylurea
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U2 - 10.1177/1060028013503624
DO - 10.1177/1060028013503624
M3 - Article
C2 - 24259692
AN - SCOPUS:84888059555
SN - 1060-0280
VL - 47
SP - 1280
EP - 1291
JO - Annals of Pharmacotherapy
JF - Annals of Pharmacotherapy
IS - 10
ER -