Incretin-Based Drugs and Adverse Pancreatic Events: Almost a Decade Later and Uncertainty Remains

Author:

Azoulay Laurent1

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Clinical Epidemiology and Community Studies, Lady Davis Institute, Jewish General Hospital and Department of Oncology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Abstract

Over the past few years, substantial clinical data have been presented showing that incretin-based therapies are effective glucose-lowering agents. Specifically, glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonists demonstrate an efficacy comparable to insulin treatment with minimal hypoglycemia and have favorable effects on body weight. Thus, many of the unmet clinical needs noted from prior therapies are addressed by these agents. However, even after many years of use, many continue to raise concerns about the long-term safety of these agents and, in particular, the concern with pancreatitis. This clearly remains a complicated topic. Thus, in this issue of Diabetes Care, we continue to update our readers on this very important issue by presenting two studies evaluating incretin-based medications and risk of pancreatitis. Both have undergone significant revisions based on peer review that provided significant clarification of the data. We applaud both author groups for being extremely responsive in providing the additional data and revisions requested by the editorial team. As such, because of the critical peer review, we feel both articles achieve the high level we require for Diabetes Care and are pleased to now present them to our readers. In keeping with our aim to comprehensively evaluate this topic, we asked for additional commentaries to be prepared. In the narrative outlined below, Dr. Laurent Azoulay provides a commentary about the remaining uncertainty in this area and also discusses the results from a nationwide population-based case-control study. In the narrative preceding Dr. Azoulay’s contribution, Prof. Edwin A.M. Gale provides a commentary on the report that focuses on clinical trials of liraglutide in the treatment of diabetes. From the journal’s perspective, both of the articles on pancreatitis and incretin-based therapies reported in this issue have been well vetted, and we feel both of the commentaries are insightful. —William T. Cefalu Editor in Chief, Diabetes Care

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

Reference24 articles.

1. A critical analysis of the clinical use of incretin-based therapies: are the GLP-1 therapies safe?;Butler;Diabetes Care,2013

2. A critical analysis of the clinical use of incretin-based therapies: the benefits by far outweigh the potential risks;Nauck;Diabetes Care,2013

3. Pancreatitis, pancreatic, and thyroid cancer with glucagon-like peptide-1-based therapies;Elashoff;Gastroenterology,2011

4. The association of pancreatitis with antidiabetic drug use: gaining insight through the FDA pharmacovigilance database;Raschi;Acta Diabetol,2013

5. Pancreatitis associated with the use of GLP-1 analogs and DPP-4 inhibitors: a case/non-case study from the French Pharmacovigilance Database;Faillie;Acta Diabetol,2014

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