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Review

rDNA insulin glargine U300 – a critical appraisal

, &
Pages 425-441 | Published online: 02 Dec 2016

Abstract

Background

As the first once-daily basal insulin analog, insulin glargine 100 U/mL (Gla-100; Lantus®) rapidly evolved into the most commonly prescribed insulin therapy worldwide. However, this insulin has clinical limitations. The approval of new basal insulin analogs in 2015 has already started to alter the prescribing landscape.

Objective

To review the available evidence on the clinical efficacy and safety of a more concentrated insulin glargine (recombinant DNA origin) injection 300 U/mL (Gla-300) compared to insulin Gla-100 in patients with type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T1DM and T2DM).

Methods

The following electronic databases were searched: PubMed and MEDLINE (using Ovid platform), Scopus, BIOSIS, and Google Scholar through June 2016. Conference proceedings of the American Diabetes Association (2015–2016) were reviewed. We also manually searched reference lists of pertinent reviews and trials.

Results

A total of 6 pivotal Phase III randomized controlled trials known as the EDITION series were reviewed. All of these trials (n=3,500) were head-to-head comparisons evaluating the efficacy and tolerability of Gla-300 vs Gla-100 in a diverse population with T1DM and T2DM. These trials were of 6 months duration with a 6-month safety extension phase.

Conclusion

Gla-300 was as effective as Gla-100 for improving glycemic control over 6 months in all studies, with a lower risk of nocturnal hypoglycemia significant only in insulin-experienced patients with T2DM. Overall, patients on Gla-300 required 10%–18% more basal insulin, but with less weight gain compared with Gla-100.

Introduction

Insulin glargine, synthesized by recombinant DNA technology (rDNA) in a concentration of 100 U/mL (insulin glargine 100 U/mL [Gla-100]; Lantus® [or Optisulin® in the EU]; Sanofi-Aventis, Paris, France) was the first once-daily basal insulin analog to be introduced into clinical practice in 2000.Citation1 It has a well-established record of efficacy and safety and is the most widely used basal insulin worldwide.Citation2Citation4 However, Gla-100 lost its US patent protection in February 2015, which opened the door for biosimilar competitors.Citation5,Citation6 In addition, new long-acting basal insulin formulations have entered the United States and global marketplace.Citation7

Basal insulin secretion is essential for the maintenance of fasting glucose levels, especially through inhibition of excessive hepatic glucose output. The aim of basal insulin replacement is to provide consistent insulin levels between meals, thereby minimizing the risk of hypoglycemia, particularly at night. The ideal basal insulin would provide a flat, peakless glucose-lowering profile, and would have a protracted duration of action of more than 24 hours to enable once-daily dosing. The introduction of rDNA technology (rDNA origin) has enabled the optimization of the properties of human insulin via modification of the amino acid sequence to provide soluble insulin analogs that better mimic physiologic insulin secretion.Citation8

The long-acting recombinant basal insulin analogs were developed to overcome some of the limitations of early intermediate-acting basal insulin complexed with protamine (neutral protamine Hagedorn [NPH] insulin).Citation9,Citation10 Established long-acting basal insulin analogs, glargine and detemir (both available as U100 insulin or 100 U/mL), were modified to delay their absorption, providing more prolonged and stable pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic characteristics compared to NPH insulin. The major benefits of these basal insulin analogs included: 1) a reduction in clinically important rates of hypoglycemia (including nocturnal and severe hypoglycemia), 2) a protracted duration of action, permitting once-daily dosing, and 3) lower within- and between-subject variability, leading to more consistent and predictable glycemic control.Citation2,Citation9,Citation10

Although no clinically relevant differences in efficacy or safety between glargine and detemir have been established in patients with type 1 or 2 diabetes mellitus (T1DM or T2DM), the available evidence suggests that higher doses of detemir as compared with Gla-100 may be needed to achieve the same glycemic control.Citation11Citation14 Additionally, detemir sometimes requires twice-daily injections to achieve similar glycemic control, but with less weight gain compared to Gla-100.Citation13,Citation14 On the basis of these findings, Gla-100 is almost always prescribed as a once-daily basal insulin, whereas detemir is sometimes dosed twice daily.

Despite the fact that many limitations of NPH insulin were addressed by Gla-100 and detemir, in clinical practice these insulin analogs sometimes do not consistently provide a full 24-hour duration of action.Citation15 As a result, nocturnal hypoglycemia can still occur when basal insulin doses are raised to improve fasting hyperglycemia.Citation2 Additionally, in patients with insulin resistance who require high doses of insulin, it is not always possible to satisfy the dose requirement without injecting large volumes. As existing insulin pens are limited to a maximum delivery of 80 units of insulin in one injection, this has often necessitated two daily injections of Glar-100 or detemir.Citation11,Citation12 When large volumes of insulin are injected at one site, the absorption is also likely to be erratic and the effect less predictable.Citation16

In this setting, novel formulations of basal insulin analogs were developed to provide more consistent insulin profiles, with more protracted durations of action beyond 24 hours. Additionally, further refinement of concentrated formulations of basal insulin analogs was intended to better address insulin resistance and high injection volumes. Recent pharma innovations include insulin degludec (Tresiba, Novo Nordisk), an ultralong-acting insulin with a duration of action >42 hours,Citation17Citation19 and several insulin glargine products including the biosimilar insulin, Basaglar (Abasaglar in Europe)Citation6,Citation20 and high-strength insulin glargine U300, a highly concentrated form of insulin glargine that delivers 300 units of insulin per 1 mL of solution (one-third of the volume).Citation21,Citation22 Development of the basal insulin peglispro, another long-acting insulin analog in Phase III trials that showed promise, was discontinued in 2015 due to signals of liver injury related to fat accumulation.Citation23 This review provides an overview comparing the clinical efficacy, safety, and tolerability data of Gla-300 (insulin glargine 300 U/mL) relative to Gla-100.

Methods

The following electronic databases were searched: PubMed and MEDLINE (using Ovid platform), Scopus, BIOSIS, and Google Scholar through June 2016. Conference proceedings of the American Diabetes Association (ADA; 2015–2016) were reviewed. We also manually searched reference lists of pertinent reviews and trials. When an abstract from a meeting and a full article referred to the same trial, only the full publication was included in the analysis.

Glargine 300 U/mL (Gla-300)

Gla-300 is approved for use in adult patients (>18 years) with T1DM and T2DM. It was licensed in the United States, Europe, and Japan in 2015 (as Toujeo® in the United States and Europe; as Lantus® XR in Japan [Sanofi-Aventis]).Citation24Citation26

Pharmacology

Insulin Gla-100 is produced by rDNA technology utilizing a nonpathogenic laboratory strain of Escherichia coli as the production organism. It differs structurally from human insulin by the addition of two arginine molecules after position B30 and the replacement of asparagine with glycine at position A21.Citation27,Citation28 This modification allows it to remain soluble within the acidic pH of the injection medium; the molecule then becomes less soluble at the pH of physiologic tissue. After subcutaneous injection, the acidic solution is neutralized at physiological pH. This leads to the formation of a microprecipitate within the subcutaneous depot, from which insulin glargine is slowly released.Citation27

The glargine molecule remains unchanged in Gla-300. Gla-300 has an identical amino acid sequence to Gla-100 and shares the same active metabolites (MI and M2).Citation29 However, Gla-300 allows the formation of a more compact subcutaneous depot with a smaller surface area (generating a longer subcutaneous residence time with exposure to tissue peptidases), leading to a reduced redissolution rate following subcutaneous injection.Citation30 This produces a more level activity profile and a more gradual and prolonged insulin release compared with Gla-100.Citation21,Citation31

Pharmacokinetics (PK) and pharmacodynamics (PD)

Several single-dose euglycemic clamp studies comparing Gla-300 with Gla-100 in both European and Japanese populations with T1DM (n=96) evaluating different doses of Gla-300 (0.4, 0.6, and 0.9 U/kg) and Gla-100 (0.4 U/kg) demonstrated that Gla-300 provided a flatter PK/PD profile over 24 hours, with a prolonged activity up to 36 hours (with doses ≥0.6 U/kg) compared with Gla-100.Citation22,Citation31,Citation32

The data was confirmed in several euglycemic clamp studies with a similar study design provided under steady-state conditions, which is a better reflection of real life than a single-dose design.Citation21,Citation29,Citation33,Citation34 At steady state, Gla-300 has a more stable and prolonged PK/PD profile than Gla-100, with a half-life of 18–19 hours (independent of dose), and a prolonged duration of glucose-lowering activity exceeding 24 hours (up to 36 hours).Citation21 This activity is more constant and evenly distributed with Gla-300 than Gla-100, with low within-subject variability and high day-to-day reproducibility.Citation33 These characteristics could potentially lead to a reduced risk of hypoglycemia with Gla-300 compared with Gla-100. Once-daily injections of Gla-300 may take up to 3–5 days to reach steady state, suggesting that dose adjustments with Gla-300 should be addressed within a week of treatment initiation.Citation21,Citation29 There is no further accumulation of its predominant active metabolite (M1) on repeat administration of Gla-300 once a day with an interval of 24 hours between injections,Citation35,Citation36 and the active metabolites have a lower affinity for insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor compared with human insulin.Citation29 Overall, there is a lack of PK data on the effects of Gla-300 in renal or hepatic impairment or in the elderly population.Citation25

Phase III clinical trials

The clinical efficacy and safety of Gla-300 compared with that of Gla-100 were evaluated in 3,500 people with diabetes in a global (North America, Europe, South Africa, and Japan) series of six pivotal Phase III studies known as the EDITION series, supported by the drug sponsor.Citation24,Citation30,Citation37Citation40 These were multicenter, randomized, open-label, parallel-group trials with similar study design and outcomes. (The open-label design was due to differences in the pen injector devices and volumes in the Gla-300 and Gla-100 treatment groups.)

EDITION 1, 2, and 3 were conducted in patients with T2DM,Citation30,Citation37,Citation38 while EDITION 4 was conducted in patients with T1DM.Citation39 EDITION JP 1Citation40 and JP 2Citation24 were conducted in Japanese patients with T1DM and T2DM, respectively ().

Table 1 Summary of baseline characteristics for individual studies

The EDITION series in T2DM included a diverse multinational population of patients who were either insulin experienced or -naive. Subjects in the EDITION 1, 2, and JP 2 studies were already receiving basal insulin, either with mealtime insulin (EDITION 1)Citation30 or oral antidiabetes drugs (OADs; EDITION 2 and JP 2);Citation24,Citation37 EDITION 3 was conducted in insulin-naive patients uncontrolled on OADs.Citation38 EDITION 4 and EDITION JP 1 were conducted in subjects with T1DM on mealtime insulin plus either Gla-300 or Gla-100 once dailyCitation39,Citation40 ().

All the individual EDITION trials were head-to-head studies of Gla-300 vs Gla-100 of 6-month treatment duration, with a preplanned 6-month safety extension phase.Citation24,Citation30,Citation37,Citation38,Citation40 Extension studies to 12 months have been completed and published for EDITION 1 and EDITION 2,Citation41,Citation42 and these data are available as abstracts in two other studies conducted in a Japanese populationCitation43,Citation44 ().

Table 2 Efficacy of Gla-300 vs Gla-100 in patients with T1DM

Table 3 Efficacy of Gla-300 vs Gla-100 in patients with T2DM

Six-monthCitation45 and 1-yearCitation46 post hoc head-to-head comparisons of Gla-300 vs Gla-100 pooled from three randomized controlled trials (RCTs; EDITION 1, 2, and 3) in T2DM (), and an indirect head-to-head analysis comparing the efficacy and safety of Gla-300 vs other basal insulin therapies for the treatment of T2DM (that included Gla-100, biosimilar glargine, detemir, degludec, NPH, and premixed insulin) has become available.Citation47

Outcomes

The EDITION studies were designed as noninferiority trials vs Gla-100, with a primary end point of change in glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) from baseline to month 6. Noninferiority was demonstrated if the upper limit of the 95% confidence interval (CI) for the mean difference in HbA1c between Gla-300 and Gla-100 was <0.4%. Participants in all studies were randomized to receive once-daily subcutaneous injections of either Gla-300 or Gla-100 adjusted once weekly (based on the median of the last 3 fasting prebreakfast self-monitored plasma glucose [SMPGs] and not more than every 3 days), titrated to achieve a fasting SMPG target of 80–100 mg/dL (4.4–5.6 mmol/L) in T2DMCitation24,Citation30,Citation37,Citation38 or 80–130 mg/dL (4.4–7.2 mmol/L) in T1DM.Citation39,Citation40 The main secondary efficacy end point was the percentage of participants with a composite category of at least one confirmed (blood glucose ≤70 mg/dL [≤3.9 mmol/L]) or severe nocturnal hypoglycemic event (0000–0559 hours) reported between week 9 and month 6 in three of these RCTsCitation30,Citation37,Citation38 and as a prespecified safety end point in all other studies.Citation24,Citation39,Citation40

Other secondary efficacy end points included the following changes measured from baseline to month 6: laboratory-measured fasting plasma glucose (FPG), percentage with HbA1c <7% and FPG ≤120 mg/dL (6.7 mmol/L), average preinjection SMPG (measured before the time of basal insulin administration), variability of preinjection SMPG, mean and variability of 24-hour plasma glucose based on 8-point SMPG profiles, daily basal insulin dose, and body weight.

Primary and secondary efficacy end points were analyzed using a modified intention-to-treat analysis (defined as all randomized participants who received at least one dose of study insulin and had both a baseline and ≥1 post-baseline assessment during the main 6-month treatment period).Citation24,Citation30,Citation37,Citation38,Citation40 Change in body weight and (in some trials) hypoglycemiaCitation24,Citation39,Citation40 were analyzed using the safety population (the safety population included all participants randomized and exposed to ≥1 dose of study treatment).

A summary of baseline characteristics from the individual study populations treated in the EDITION trials in both T1DM and T2DM patients is shown in . Changes in efficacy end points (HbA1c, FPG, body weight) from baseline to 6 and 12 months in T1DM and T2DM are presented in , respectively. The incidence and rates of confirmed hypoglycemic events are described in .

Table 4 Percent of ≥1 confirmed hypoglycemic (≤70 mg/dL) or severe hypoglycemia events in T1DM and T2DM patients

Type 1 diabetes (T1DM)

The clinical efficacy and tolerability of Gla-300 compared to Gla-100 were evaluated in two Phase III clinical trials (EDITION 4 and JP 1) that enrolled a total of 792 patients with T1DM already on a stable dose of basal and mealtime insulin. The treatment regimen was once-daily Gla-300 or Gla-100 administered either in the evening (EDITION JP 1) or in the morning or evening (EDITION 4), while continuing mealtime insulinCitation39,Citation40 (). The population with T1DM in these trials was middle aged, with a duration of diabetes of 21.0 and 13.0 years, and a body mass index (BMI) of 28 and 24 kg/m2, respectively, comparing the Japanese population in EDITION JP-1 to a multinational population in EDITION 4Citation39,Citation40 ().

Glycemic control

In EDITION 4 (n=549) and EDITION JP-1 (n=243), once-daily Gla-300 was found to be noninferior to once-daily Gla-100. A similar reduction in HbA1c from baseline to month 6 was seen in both treatment groups, with a difference between groups of 0.04% (95% CI: −0.10 to 0.19) and 0.13% (95% CI: −0.03 to 0.29), respectively. There was also no difference observed in glycemic control when Gla-300 was injected in the morning or evening.Citation39 A similar percentage of people in each group achieved HbA1c <7% at month 6, 16%–17% for Gla-300 and 15%–20% for Gla-100, respectively (no statistical analysis reported). The average preinjection SMPG was significantly lower with Gla-300 vs Gla-100 at month 6, and otherwise other secondary end points were similar between the groups.Citation39,Citation40 In the Japanese extension study (baseline to month 12), glycemic control continued to be comparable between Gla-300 and Gla-100 (mean change in HbA1c and FPG levels were −0.20% and −14 mg/dL compared to −0.25% and −7.2 mg/dL, respectively).Citation44

Basal insulin dose and body weight

At 6 months in EDITION 4, the basal insulin dose was approximately 18% higher with Gla-300 (0.47 U/kg/d) than with Gla-100 (0.40 U/kg/d). Body weight increased in both groups, but at month 6, the mean increase was smaller with Gla-300 (0.5 kg compared with 1.0 kg; p=0.037).Citation39 Similarly, in JP-1, basal insulin requirements were higher with Gla-300 (0.35 U/kg/d) than with Gla-100 (0.29 U/kg/d), with little change in dose observed between months 6 and 12.Citation40,Citation44 However, there was a significant difference in body weight change at 6 months with Gla-300 (−0.1 kg compared with +0.4 kg; p=0.035; ).Citation40 These contrasting results may be explained in part by the differences found in the BMI (ie, diet and lifestyle) and duration of diabetes between the populations, which could alter the effect of exogenous insulin requirements.Citation40

Type 2 diabetes (T2DM)

Gla-300 was compared to Gla-100 in 4 RCTs,Citation24,Citation30,Citation37,Citation38 which enrolled a total of 2,737 participants with diverse background regimens. All participants were randomized to receive once-daily injections of Gla-300 or Gla-100 administered in the evening (ie, from before the evening meal until bedtime). Three of these studies enrolled patients with high basal insulin doses (≥42 U/d). The first study, EDITION 1, included participants not adequately controlled on basal and mealtime insulin (with or without metformin),Citation30 while EDITION 2 and EDITION JP-2 included patients who had previously received basal insulin therapy in combination with OADs, but without injections of mealtime insulin.Citation24,Citation37 EDITION 3 included a population of insulin-naive subjects receiving background therapy with OADs.Citation38 In the two studies of patients on previous basal insulin therapy plus OADs (EDITION 2, JP-2), the study designs were very similar, and prior OAD therapies were continued at stable doses. However, in EDITION 2, sulfonylureas were discontinued at randomization,Citation37 whereas, in EDITION JP-2, sulfonylureas and glinides were continued throughout the study with doses adjusted for ≥2 symptomatic or one severe hypoglycemic episode.Citation24 The proportion of participants receiving sulfonylurea therapy, therefore, was much higher in the JP-2 study.Citation24 In the insulin-naive population (EDITION 3), any sulfonylureas or glinides were discontinued at randomization, while metformin and dipeptidyl peptidase inhibitors were continued.Citation38

The starting dose of basal insulin in the EDITION 3 was 0.2 U/kg in both treatment groups.Citation38 For patients previously using once-daily basal insulin in EDITION 1, 2, and JP-2, the starting dose was the basal insulin dose used before randomization; in patients receiving twice-daily basal insulin, the starting dose was reduced by 20%.Citation24,Citation30

The two groups had similar characteristics at baseline (). Overall, the population at baseline had a mean age of 59 years, duration of diabetes of 13 years, HbA1c of 8.2%, body weight of 91.7 kg, and BMI of 32.4 kg/m2. Some differences between the trial populations included a shorter duration of diabetes in the insulin-naive population in EDITION 3Citation38 (9.9 vs 14 years) and a lower body weight and BMI in Japanese patients in the EDITION JP-2 studyCitation24 compared to the more ethnically diverse and obese T2DM population enrolled in the other 3 studies (66 kg vs 99.8 kg and 25.3 kg/m2 vs 34.7 kg/m2, respectively).Citation30,Citation37,Citation38

Full published data of the 12-month extension trials in T2DM are available for 2 studiesCitation41,Citation42 and as an abstract in one small study in Japanese patients.Citation43

Glycemic control

In EDITION 1 (n=807), EDITION 2 (n=811), EDITION 3 (n=878), and EDITION JP-2 (n=241), there was an equivalent reduction in HbA1c from baseline to month 6, demonstrating that in insulin-experienced (EDITION 1, 2, JP-2) and insulin-naive (EDITION 3) patients with T2DM, both Gla-300 and Gla-100 improved glycemic control. The results from these individual studies were also supported by a post hoc analysis from the 6-month pooled dataset of EDITION 1, EDITION 2, and EDITION 3 (n=2,496).Citation45 Additional data (available as abstracts) from the 6-month post hoc analyses of EDITION 1, 2, and 3 confirmed the comparable glycemic efficacy for Gla-300 vs Gla-100, irrespective of age (<65 and ≥65 years), BMI (<30 and ≥30 kg/m2), diabetes duration (<10 and ≥10 years), concomitant administration of dipeptidyl peptidase-IV inhibitors, or renal function.Citation48Citation51

In the individual extension studies, similar glycemic control was maintained over 12 months between the two treatment groups in patients receiving basal insulin plus OAD therapy,Citation42,Citation43 whereas there was a significant reduction in favor of Gla-300 in patients on basal plus mealtime insulin (−0.17 [95% CI −0.30 to −0.05] %; p=0.007).Citation41 These findings were supported by 1-year post hoc patient-level pooled analyses of EDITION 1, 2, and 3, where there was a more sustained HbA1c reduction in favor of Gla-300 at 1 year (−0.10 [95% CI −0.18 to −0.02]%; p=0.0174; available as an abstract).Citation46

Long-term glycemic effects

In the 12-month extension studies of T2DM, glycemic control was comparable and sustained in two similar studies using basal insulin plus OADs.Citation42,Citation43 There was a small but significant difference in reduction of HbA1c favoring Gla-300 in EDITION 1 (basal plus mealtime insulin; −0.17, 95% CI: −0.30 to −0.05%; p=0.007).Citation41 The more sustained HbA1c reduction for Gla-300 at 1 year is also confirmed in the post hoc pooled data of EDITION 1, 2, and 3Citation46 ().

Between months 6 and 12, basal insulin doses in all of the extension studies increased gradually in both treatment groups, to a greater extent in the Gla-300 group compared to the Gla-100 group; these differences were only statistically significant in EDITION 2 (0.11 U/kg/d; p<0.0001). Similarly, the body weight difference observed at 6 months was maintained at 12 monthsCitation41 and was significantly lower with Gla-300 vs Gla-100 in patients on a regimen of basal insulin plus OADs (−0.7 kg, 95% CI: −1.3 to −0.2; p=0.009; ).Citation42,Citation43

Secondary end points

Similar reductions from baseline to 6 months were also seen in both Gla-300 and Gla-100 for secondary glycemic end points, including the proportion of patients achieving an HbA1c ≤7% or ≤6.5%, the proportion of patients achieving a FPG <120 mg/dL or <100 mg/dL, and in the change from baseline in laboratory-measured FPG.Citation24,Citation30,Citation37,Citation38 However, in insulin-naive patients, the mean change in laboratory-measured FPG was slightly greater in the Gla-100 group than in the Gla-300 group: least-square mean difference of 7.0 (95% CI: 1.8–12.2) mg/dL.Citation38 In addition to the more gradual decrease in prebreakfast SMPG with Gla-300, this small difference (7.0 mg/dL) may reflect differences in the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic profiles of Gla-300 vs Gla-100, with Gla-300 delivering more even insulin action throughout the 24-hour period compared with Gla-100.Citation38

Changes at 6 months in the mean 8-point SMPG profiles, preinjection SMPG, and variability in preinjection SMPG levels were similar in all of the EDITION studies, with relatively small between-treatment differences observed at month 6.Citation24,Citation30,Citation37,Citation38 However, in EDITION 2 (basal + OADs), the mean prebreakfast SMPG was lower with Gla-100 than with Gla-300 during the first 8 weeks (demonstrating that Gla-100 has a faster onset), with a more gradual decrease in prebreakfast SMPG in the Gla-300 group. At 6 months, a similar average prebreakfast SMPH was reached in both groups.Citation37

Basal insulin dose and body weight

Increases in basal insulin doses occurred in both groups throughout the 6-month treatment period, with the majority of the increase occurring in the first 12 weeks (the first 8 weeks was the titration phase). Basal insulin doses were higher with Gla-300 than Gla-100 (+7–11 U/d), and overall, the Gla-300 group required 10% more basal insulin than the Gla-100 group.Citation30,Citation37,Citation38 In contrast, the increase in basal insulin requirements was much lower (4 U/d) for the Japanese population in EDITION JP 2 (basal + OAD).Citation24 This difference was attributed to the lower BMI found in the Japanese population with T2DM compared to the Western population (BMI of 25 and 35 kg/m2, respectively).Citation24,Citation30,Citation37,Citation38 Despite the increase in basal insulin requirements, participants treated with Gla-300 either gained a similar amount of weight (+0.9 kg in EDITION 1; basal + mealtime insulin)Citation30 or weight gain was lower with Gla-300 compared to Gla-100.Citation24,Citation37,Citation38 Less weight gain in favor of Gla-300 was significant only in patients receiving basal insulin + OADs.Citation24,Citation37

Safety and tolerability

Hypoglycemia

Hypoglycemia was analyzed using the incidence (or percentage) of participants experiencing ≥1 event (relative risk) and the annualized event rates per participant-year (rate ratio) of exposure for intervals of time (full 6-month study period, baseline to week 8, and week 9 to month 6) and categories of hypoglycemia.Citation24,Citation30,Citation37,Citation38 Hypoglycemic events were categorized using the American Diabetes Association (ADA) definitions and were analyzed according to the time of day that they occurred (daytime [0600–2359 hours], any time of day or night [24 hours], or nocturnal [0000–0559 hours]). Specific hypoglycemic categories included the following: 1) any hypoglycemia (confirmed by SMPG or not and whether symptomatic or asymptomatic; 2) documented symptomatic hypoglycemia (≤70 mg/dL); 3) asymptomatic hypoglycemia (confirmed by SMPG ≤70 mg/dL); and 4) severe hypoglycemia (events requiring assistance by another person).Citation52 The predefined hypoglycemia category in all EDITION studies was confirmed (≤70 mg/dL) or severe nocturnal hypoglycemia (0000–0559 hours) and hypoglycemia at any time (24 hours) for the interval periods between week 9 to month 6 and baseline to month 6. These studies also analyzed all confirmed hypoglycemic events with an SMPG of 54 mg/dL; however, these are not discussed in this review.

Hypoglycemia in T2DM

Nocturnal hypoglycemia

In EDITION 1, 2, and 3, the main prespecified secondary end point was the proportion of patients experiencing ≥1 confirmed (SMPG of ≤70 mg/dL) or severe nocturnal (0000–0559 hours) hypoglycemic events during the maintenance period (week 9 to month 6).Citation30,Citation37,Citation38 This was not a prespecified end point in EDITION JP 2.Citation24

Insulin-experienced

In insulin-experienced patients with T2DM, despite differences in treatment regimens, the results of EDITION 1 (basal and mealtime insulin), EDITION 2, and JP 2 (basal insulin plus OADs) were consistent for nocturnal hypoglycemia. Across the 3 studies, Gla-300 demonstrated superiority over Gla-100 in reducing the risk of experiencing at least one confirmed (≤70 mg/dL) or severe nocturnal hypoglycemic event. This reduction was consistently observed with Gla-300 during the entire study period from baseline to month 6, as well as during the first 8 weeks (titration phase), and from week 9 to the end of 6 months ().

In EDITION 1, there was a 10% absolute and a 21% reduction in risk (RR: 0.79 [95% CI: 0.67–0.93], p=0.0045); in EDITION 2, there was a 6% absolute and 23% relative decrease in risk (RR: 0.77 [95% CI: 0.60–0.97], p=0.038); and in the Japanese population in EDITION JP 2, Gla-300 was associated with a 19% absolute and 42% relative decrease in risk (RR: 0.58 [95% CI: 0.40–0.85]) from week 9 to month 6 in all studies.Citation24,Citation30,Citation37 Similarly, when looking at the annualized rates (events per participant-year) of confirmed (≤70 mg/dL) or severe hypoglycemia across the 6-month study period, significant rate reductions were seen during the night (29%, p=not reported; 48%, p=0.0010; 55%, p=0.04 in EDITION 1, 2, and JP 2, respectively).Citation24,Citation30,Citation37

In the 12-month extensions, EDITION 1 and 2 (n=1,994), Gla-300 exhibited a 16% lower risk of nocturnal hypoglycemia that was maintained over a 1-year period (RR: 0.84, 95% CI: 0.75–0.94 and RR: 0.84, 95% CI: 0.71–0.99, respectively),Citation41,Citation42 whereas there was a 27% lower risk of nocturnal hypoglycemia maintained over the long term in a more culturally homogenous Japanese population enrolled in EDITION JP 2 (RR: 0.73, 95% CI: 0.55–0.97).Citation43

In a post hoc analysis of a patient population treated with basal insulin plus OADs (EDITION 2, n=808), all hypoglycemic event rates were generally lower with Gla-300 in subjects reaching SMPG <130 mg/dL and those not reaching SMPG <100 or <130 mg/dL and event rates for any nocturnal hypoglycemia were significantly lower regardless of SMPG level achievement.Citation53

Insulin naive

In general, superiority of Gla-300 over Gla-100 was not demonstrated with respect to the predefined main secondary end point in EDITION 3. The risk of nocturnal hypoglycemia from week 9 to month 6 did not significantly differ between insulin-naive patients with T2DM receiving treatment with Gla-300 and Gla-100. Nevertheless, with Gla-300 relative to Gla-100, the risk of experiencing at least one nocturnal event that was severe or confirmed (≤70 mg/dL) was 24% lower over the entire 6-month treatment period (RR: 0.76 [95% CI: 0.59–0.99]). The annualized event rates of nocturnal confirmed or severe hypoglycemia were also similar for Gla-300 vs Gla-100.Citation38 An extension study to 12 months has been completed, but not yet published.

Hypoglycemia at any time of day (24 hours)

In insulin-experienced patients with T2DM, the percentage of patients experiencing ≥1 confirmed or severe hypoglycemic event at any time (24 hours) over 6 months was comparable in patients receiving basal plus mealtime insulinCitation30 or reduced by 10%–14% in patients receiving basal insulin plus OADs with Gla-300 compared with Gla-100, RR: 0.90 (95% CI: 0.83–0.98) and RR: 0.86 (95% CI: 0.83–1.01), respectively.Citation24,Citation37

In insulin-naive patients, the relative reduction of confirmed or severe hypoglycemia with Gla-300 over months was 12% (RR: 0.88 [95% CI: 77–1.01]), whereas the annualized event rate was significantly lower with Gla-300 (6.4 vs 8.5 events per participant-year; RR: 0.75 [95% CI: 0.57–0.99]; p=0.042).Citation38 Notably, in EDITION 3, these benefits in terms of lower hypoglycemia risk were observed in the absence of sulfonylureas, which in previous studies of starting basal insulin were associated with greater rates of hypoglycemia events per participant-year.Citation38

Long-term 12-month extension studies

In T2DM demonstrated that confirmed or severe hypoglycemic events at any time of day (24 hours) were numerically lower but not significantly different with Gla-300 compared to Gla-100 ().Citation41Citation43

Switching from twice-daily basal insulin to once-daily Gla-300

In a post hoc subgroup analysis, people with T2DM enrolled in EDITION 1 (basal + mealtime insulin) and EDITION 2 (basal + OADs) who were switched from twice-daily basal insulin to once-daily Gla-300 or Gla-100 received comparable glycemic control with less hypoglycemia with Gla-300 vs those switching to Gla-100 over a 6-month period.Citation54

Hypoglycemia in T1DM

Over 6 months, in both EDITION 1 (n=549) and JP 1 (n=243), the incidence (relative risk) of confirmed (<70 mg/dL) or severe nocturnal (0000–0559 hours) hypoglycemia at any time of day (24 hours) between week 9 and month 6 did not significantly differ between Gla-300 and Gla-100.Citation39,Citation40 The incidence of hypoglycemia with Gla-300 did not differ even when analyzed by morning or evening injection time.Citation39 However, when the annualized rates were reported in the homogenous Japanese population, the event rates of confirmed (≤70 mg/dL) or severe hypoglycemia with Gla-300 were 20% and 34% lower than that for Gla-100 for events occurring at any time (24 hours) and at night (0000–0559 hours), respectively.Citation40 This was particularly apparent during the first 8 weeks of the insulin titration phase.Citation40 This is consistent with results from a multinational population in EDITION 4, in which there was a 31% lower rate of nocturnal confirmed or severe hypoglycemia observed in the first 8 weeks with Gla-300 vs Gla-100 (although this was not maintained over the whole study period). In JP 1, the significantly lower rate of hypoglycemia at any time of day (24 hours) and at night (0000–0559 hours) from baseline to month 6 was not reflected in EDITION 4, where no between-treatment differences in rates at any time of day and night were observed.Citation39,Citation40 In the 12-month Japanese extension, the rates (events per participant-year) and percentage of participants experiencing ≥1 nocturnal confirmed (<70 mg/dL) or severe hypoglycemic event were comparable between groupsCitation44 ().

Hypoglycemia data from post hoc pooled analysis

All the available pooled analyses were conducted in T2DM. The pooled analysis of EDITION 1, 2, and 3 (n=2,474) showed there was a lower relative risk for confirmed or severe hypoglycemia at any time (24 hours) and at night (00:00–05:59 hours) in favor of Gla-300 at 6 monthsCitation45 and at 12 months (available as an abstract).Citation46

Over the 6-month treatment period, the frequency of patients who had at least one confirmed hypoglycemic event at any time (24 hours) was approximately 6% (n=78) fewer patients reporting at least one event in the Gla-300 group and 10% (n=121) fewer patients in the Gla-300 group who reported at least one nocturnal hypoglycemic event. The annualized rate of confirmed or severe nocturnal events was 31% lower with Gla-300 compared with Gla-100 (2.10 events per participant-year with Gla-300 and 3.06 with Gla-100; RR: 0.69, 95% CI: 0.57–0.84, p=−0.0002; mainly driven by the findings of EDITION 1 and 2). This is a reduction of approximately one confirmed or severe nocturnal event per person per year, which is of debatable clinical significance. A further subgroup analysis of the pooled data demonstrated that the lower risk of confirmed or severe hypoglycemia in favor of Gla-300 was not affected by age (<65 or ≥65 years), BMI (<30 or ≥30 kg/m2), duration of diabetes, or presence of mild-to-moderate renal impairment.Citation48,Citation51

It should be noted that the beneficial effects of Gla-300 on nocturnal hypoglycemia were also apparent when the prespecified nocturnal period (0000–0559 hours) was changed to a clinically defined window of 2200 hours to prebreakfast SMPG Citation55 and extended to a potentially more vulnerable subgroup aged ≥65 years.Citation49 In a more recent analysis (of EDITION 1, 2, and 3) that included a much broader predefined window than previous (2200–0559 hours, 0000–0759 hours, 2200 hours to prebreakfast SMPG), the beneficial effect of Gla-300 on nocturnal hypoglycemia continued to be apparent; however, the total number of events was consistently greatest for period 2200 hours to prebreakfast SMPG vs other windows. The corresponding annualized rates were lower in favor of Gla-300 for all windows (34% for 2200–0559 hours; 30% for 0000–0759 hours; 29% for 2200 hours to prebreakfast SMPG).Citation56 Furthermore, people treated with Gla-300 experienced a consistently lower rate of confirmed or severe hypoglycemia vs those treated with Gla-100, regardless of HbA1c over 6 months of treatment.Citation57

In a trilevel meta-analysis in T2DM (using pooled data from the BEGIN and EDITION programs), comparing Gla-300 and insulin degludec (IDeg) to Gla-100, the risk of confirmed (≤70 mg/dL) or severe hypoglycemia was lower with IDeg vs Gla-100 at night (0001–0559 hours) but comparable at any time (24 hours). Gla-300 provided a lower risk of anytime and nocturnal hypoglycemia (available as an abstract).Citation58 In a network (NMA) comparison that indirectly compared Gla-300 vs other available basal insulins, Gla-300 was associated with a significantly lower risk of nocturnal hypoglycemia (64%–82% lower) when compared with NPH (0.18; 0.05–0.55) and premixed insulin (0.36; 0.14–0.94). The hypoglycemia risks were comparable to insulin detemir and degludec.Citation47

Adverse events

Other safety end points included occurrence of treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) and injection site reactions. Information from the individual 6-month EDITION and extension trials indicate a comparable and infrequent rate of TEAEs and treatment-emergent severe AEs.Citation24,Citation30,Citation37Citation42 The patient-level meta-analysis of the EDITION 1, 2, and 3 showed that TEAEs were reported by 57% participants in the Gla-300 group and 54% participants in the Gla-100 group. The most common TEAEs were infections and infestations (most commonly nasopharyngitis and upper respiratory tract infection), nervous system disorders, gastrointestinal disorders, and musculoskeletal and connective tissue disorders.Citation45

In type 1 or 2 patients on basal plus mealtime insulin, injection site reactions were slightly higher for Gla-300 (2.2%) compared to Gla-100 (1.5%).Citation30,Citation39 In patients on basal insulin plus OADs for 12 months, injection site reactions were either higher or lower for Gla-300 vs Gla-100 (3.0% vs 1.5% and 1.2% vs 3.0%, respectively),Citation41,Citation42 whereas insulin-naive patients experienced a higher level of injection site reactions compared to the insulin-experienced population, but there was no difference found between the two groups (4% vs 5%, respectively).Citation38

Patient-reported outcomes

Treatment satisfaction and perception of occurrence of hypo- and hyperglycemia were assessed using the validated Diabetes Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire. Treatment satisfaction scores and the perceived frequency of hypoglycemia were similar between treatment groups, and satisfaction generally improved from baseline to month 6,Citation30,Citation37Citation39 and was maintained at month 12, resulting in an overall mean increase from baseline to month 12 of 4.3 with Gla-300 and 4.4 with Gla-100. Perceived frequency of hypoglycemia remained stable with both treatment and perceived frequency of hyperglycemia slightly decreased in both treatment groups from baseline to month 12.Citation42

Use in special populations

There are no clinical studies of Gla-300 in pregnant women, in children and adolescents below 18 years of age, and in patients with hepatic impairment. Therefore, Gla-300 has not yet been demonstrated to be safe and effective in these populations. Subgroup analysis in an elderly population (≥65 years of age) and in people with mild-to-moderate renal impairment suggests that Gla-300 can be used in this population with frequent monitoring and dose adjustment.Citation48,Citation49,Citation51,Citation59

Flexibility in dosing time

The PK and PD profile of Gla-300 extending beyond 24 hours suggested a greater flexibility in basal insulin injection time; therefore, the efficacy and safety of flexible dosing (24± up to 3 hours) was compared to fixed dosing (24 hours) intervals in two 12-week substudies following the main 6-month treatment period within EDITION 1 and EDITION 2 (n=194).Citation60 The primary efficacy end point was the change in HbA1c from baseline to the end of the 3-month substudy. Secondary end points included the change in FPG and daily basal insulin doses, and confirmed nocturnal (0000–0559 hours) and any time (24 hours) hypoglycemia. Administration with a flexible dosing time (within 3 hours before or after the usual time of administration) had no effect on glycemic control and the incidence of hypoglycemia.Citation60

Dosing and administration

Gla-300 is available in a multidose, SoloStar (Sanofi-Aventis) disposable prefilled pen packaged in boxes of three or five pens (each pen contains 1.5 mL of solution equivalent to 450 U of Gla-300). Each pen device allows the administration of Gla-300 doses up to a maximum of 80 units (in 1 unit increments) in a single injection. The higher concentration of Gla-300 was specifically designed to deliver the same number of insulin units in one-third of the volume as Gla-100; therefore, it does not require any further dose conversion.Citation61 It is recommended to be administered via subcutaneous injection once daily, at the same time each dayCitation25 or at any time (preferably at the same time) of the day.Citation26 Patients have the flexibility to administer Gla-300 up to 3 hours before or after their usual time of administration without losing glycemic control.Citation60 Gla-300 has the same administration, storage, and expiration instructions as Gla-100.Citation25 The recommended starting dose of Gla-300 in insulin-naive patients with T2DM is 0.2 U/kg/d. The starting dose in insulin-naive patients with T1DM is 0.2–0.4 U/kg/d with approximately 33%–50% of the total daily dose requirement given as Gla-300 insulin and the remainder provided as mealtime insulin divided between each meal.Citation25

Switching insulins in insulin-experienced patients

Gla-300 and Gla-100 are not bioequivalent and cannot be used interchangeably. In patients switching from a once-daily basal insulin, the starting dose of Gla-300 can be done on a unit-to-unit basis, and should be the same as the once-daily basal insulin dose, but a higher Gla-300 dose (approximately 10%–18%) may be needed to achieve target ranges for plasma glucose levels. When switching from twice-daily basal insulins, the recommended starting dose of Gla-300 is 80% of the total daily dose of basal insulin that is being discontinued.Citation25,Citation26 When switching from Gla-300 to Gla-100, the dose should be reduced by approximately 20% to reduce the risk of hypoglycemia.Citation26 Steady-state insulin levels are reached in 5 days, and dose titration is recommended no more frequently than every 3–4 days to minimize the risk of hypoglycemia.Citation25

Comparison of Gla-300 insulin pen to other commercial insulin pens

In a laboratory-based injection-force study, Gla-300 Solo-Star demonstrated comparable dose accuracy and greater reproducibility compared with the Flexpen (Novo Nordisk A/S, Bagsvaerd, Denmark) and Kwikpen (Eli Lilly & CO, Indianapolis, IN, USA), but with a lower injection force.Citation61 A 4-week study of insulin- and pen-naive patients with T2DM (n=40) found the Gla-300 SoloStar disposable pen reliable, easy to learn, and easy to use.Citation62 In an interview-based survey, Gla-300 SoloStar pen was ranked first by more patients with T1DM (n=26) or T2DM (n=228) as being the easiest to use and inject than three other disposable insulin pens (Gla-100 SoloStar, insulin aspart Flexpen, and insulin lispro Kwikpen).Citation63

Real-world application

The clinical outcomes of early users of Gla-300 in the real-world primary care setting were assessed in a retrospective study using data extracted from 24 US-based integrated delivery network systems.Citation64 Eight hundred and eighty one patients with T2DM who used other basal insulins within the 6 months prior to Gla-300 initiation (defined as having >1 prescription order of Gla-300 over a 10-month period) and up to 6 months after Gla-300 initiation were identified. HbA1c assessments at baseline and during following up were extracted for a small subset (n=267) of patients and hypoglycemic events (n=449) were identified based on ICD-9-CM diagnosis codes or blood glucose ≤70 mg/dL. Patient demographics included a mean age of 60 years, HbA1c of 9% with a high prevalence of the following comorbidities: hypertension, dyslipidemia, and diabetes-related complications. Switching to Gla-300 was associated with improved glycemic control (mean estimated reduction of 0.64%, p<0.0001) and decreased occurrence of hypoglycemia (6% vs 5%, baseline vs follow-up).Citation64

In another study (available as an abstract), real-world performance measures based on national benchmark standards (ie, ADA, and US National Committee for Quality Assurance-Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set 2014) were applied to the dataset of EDITION 3 (insulin-naive patients) to assess glycemic control and incidence of hypoglycemia.Citation65 Patients were stratified into low risk (LR; without comorbidities and age <65, n=629) or high risk (HR; age ≥65 years and/or having ≥1 selected comorbidity, n=233) groups. In the LR cohort, comparable percentages of Gla-300 and Gla-100 patients achieved A1c <7% (p=0.9), and a significantly higher proportion of Gla-300 treated patients achieved A1c <7% without severe or confirmed 24 hours hypoglycemia compared with Gla-100 (22% vs 15%, respectively; p=0.025). In the HR cohort, comparable percentages of Gla-300- and Gla-100-treated patients achieved an A1c level <8% (p=0.275). Similarly, a higher proportion of Gla-300-treated patients achieved A1c <8% without severe or confirmed hypoglycemia compared with Gla-100-treated patients (37% vs 28%, respectively; p=0.174). Thus, using real-world diabetes performance measures, patients in the LR cohort treated with Gla-300 were more likely to achieve target A1c levels without severe or confirmed hypoglycemia compared with Gla-100-treated patients.Citation65

Conclusion

Clinically, insulin-resistant patients present a very difficult therapeutic challenge. Obese diabetic patients often require huge insulin doses, and with rising doses of available basal U-100 insulin products, there is a “law of diminishing returns.” In other words, high insulin doses provide little additional efficacy (glucose lowering) but often generate undesirable side effects (hypoglycemia, weight gain, and fluid retention). Part of this problem is thought to be due to insulin bioavailability. Once insulin volume exceeds 0.5 mL, pharmacokinetic curves begin to fall apart because of the large subcutaneous insulin depot that takes longer to absorb; this delays clinical insulin action. It is here that concentrated insulins, such as Eli Lilly’s U-500 concentrated insulin, have shown clinical benefit. Equivalent doses of more concentrated insulins often yield superior clinical results.Citation66,Citation67

U-300 glargine insulin offers the potential for similar efficacy and lower insulin doses, potentially leading to fewer side effects at high doses. The extended duration of action and more consistent within-day profile of Gla-300 make this insulin analog attractive as a true once-daily basal insulin replacement. The Phase III EDITION trials were adequately powered to demonstrate a noninferiority margin of 0.4% for the comparison to Gla-100. In summary, all of the 6-month EDITION trials showed that Gla-300 provided noninferior HbA1c lowering compared with Gla-100, with glycemic control maintained over 12 months.Citation24,Citation30,Citation37Citation40,Citation42Citation44 There was only a small but significant difference in HbA1c reduction at 12 months favoring Gla-300 in insulin-experienced patients with T2DM using basal plus mealtime insulin (p=0.007).Citation41,Citation46

Basal insulin doses for Gla-300 needed to achieve equivalent glycemic control were higher than for Gla-100, both in patients with T2DM (10% higher) and T1DM (18% higher).Citation30,Citation37Citation39 This increase was not observed in Japanese patients with T2DM.Citation24 Despite the higher dose, similarCitation30 or smaller weight changesCitation24,Citation37Citation40 were seen in participants receiving Gla-300 vs Gla-100. Weight loss was only statistically significant in T2DM patients on a combination of basal insulin plus OADCitation37 and in Japanese patients.Citation24,Citation40 This difference observed in the Japanese population may be attributed to a lower BMI and a shorter duration of diabetes, compared to the heavier and more ethnically diverse multinational population included in the EDITION studies.

Despite equivalent efficacy in terms of glycemic control, the use of Gla-300 in patients with T1DM resulted in no difference in the incidence of nocturnal or hypoglycemia at any time of day (24 hours). Annualized event rates were 20%–34% lower only in the first 8 weeks of the titration phase.Citation39,Citation40

In contrast, the findings of hypoglycemia in patients with T2DM were different depending on prior exposure to insulin. In insulin-naive patients, there was a 12% reduction in daytime hypoglycemia from week 9 to month 6, but no difference between groups in nocturnal hypoglycemia.Citation38 On the other hand, in insulin-experienced patients, Gla-300 demonstrated superiority over Gla-100 in reducing the risk of nocturnal hypoglycemia by 21%–23%,Citation30,Citation37 or by 42% in Japanese patients.Citation24 However, there was no differenceCitation30 or just a small 10%–14% risk reductionCitation24,Citation37 in hypoglycemia at any time of day (24 hours).

It stands to reason that more consistent basal insulins such as Glargine U-300 would best lower the incidence of hypoglycemia during overnight hours. During the day, variables such as diet, physical activity, and stressors often affect insulin requirements, while rapid-acting insulins predominate for generating hypoglycemic events. At night, basal insulin activity predominates. As a result, more stable long-acting insulins would be expected to minimize nocturnal hypoglycemia. In addition, since patients are sleeping overnight, usual warning signs such as hunger cannot protect them from hypoglycemia.

There are currently no head-to-head comparisons of Gla-300 vs insulin degludec. However, a network meta-analysis comparing Gla-300 to degludec and other basal insulins suggests that Gla-300 exhibits comparable glycemic control, with a significantly lower risk of hypoglycemic events vs NPH, biosimilar glargine, and premixed insulin.Citation47 There are very limited patient-oriented outcome data for the effects of Gla-300 on macrovascular or microvascular outcomes, and very limited long-term safety data for the 300 U/mL insulin glargine strength specifically. Gla-300 has not been studied in patients with insulin resistance (eg, total daily dose exceeding 200 U/d). However, currently, for insulin-resistant patients, Gla-300 offers the advantage of providing a higher concentration of basal insulin glargine at one-third the volume of insulin glargine 100 U/mL ().

Table 5 Summary: Gla-300 compared to Gla-100

Author contributions

This manuscript was conceived, developed, and written by F Wang; S Zassman conducted the literature search and developed the tables; and P A Goldberg critically revised the manuscript. All authors contributed toward data analysis, drafting and critically revising the paper and agree to be accountable for all aspects of the work.

Acknowledgments

The authors acknowledge Ms Sharon Giovenale and Valori Banfi, University of Connecticut librarians, for their assistance and advice in conducting a thorough literature search.

Disclosure

Dr Goldberg has received speaker honoraria from Novo Nordisk, Eli Lilly, Astra Zeneca, and Boehringer Ingelheim. The authors report no other conflicts of interest in this work.

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