Affiliation:
1. Centre for Molecular Biology, Central University of Jammu, UT of Jammu and Kashmir, 181143, India
2. Department
of Pharmacy, Birla Institute of Technology and Sciences Pilani, Hyderabad, Telangana, 500078, India
Abstract
Abstract:
Diabetes is a medical condition associated with impaired glucose regulation caused
either due to insufficient insulin production or resistance to insulin (Type 2 diabetes, gestational
diabetes) or the absence of insulin through the selective killing of beta cells in the pancreas
(Type 1 diabetes). Irregular insulin production leads to various health complications. To prevent
such complications, patients must adhere to medical recommendations before availing of any
advanced insulin therapy(ies), considered productive for the treatment. Natural insulin, although
highly effective in controlling blood glucose levels, patients are often at risk of developing hypoglycemia
and many other complications. This has led to the development of insulin analogs,
the modified variants of natural insulin having a minimal risk of causing hypoglycemia. Besides
the development of analogs, the mode of insulin delivery is also considered critical in achieving
better glycemic control in diabetic patients. Until recently, various exogenous insulin delivery
methods were practiced, but effective glycemic control without any associated risk and ease of
delivery remains a subject of paramount concern. It countered attenuation or delayed onset of
diabetes-associated complications without a permanent cure, raising an unmet demand for insulin
formulations and delivery methods that offer stability, biocompatibility, reproducibility, precision
dosing, non-immunogenicity, and safety. The current practice utilizes non-physiological
delivery methods with less invasive administration routes, offering glycemic stability and therapeutic
effectiveness. This review focuses on the recent advances made and future perspectives
envisioned about newer insulin therapies and delivery methods that tend to improve the management
of diabetes by inculcating ideas to reduce the disease’s severity and improve the quality
of life.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.