Pioglitazone: The forgotten, cost-effective cardioprotective drug for type 2 diabetes.
Muhammad Abdul-GhaniSilvio InzucchiMuhammad Abdul-GhaniSteven E NissenPublished in: Diabetes & vascular disease research (2019)
Type 2 diabetes individuals are at high risk for macrovascular complications: myocardial infarction, stroke and cardiovascular mortality. Recent cardiovascular outcome trials have demonstrated that agents in two antidiabetic classes (SGLT2 inhibitors and GLP-1 receptor agonists) reduce major adverse cardiovascular events. However, there is strong evidence that an older and now generically available medication, the thiazolidinedione, pioglitazone, can retard the atherosclerotic process (PERISCOPE and Chicago) and reduce cardiovascular events in large randomized prospective cardiovascular outcome trials (IRIS and PROactive). Pioglitazone is a potent insulin sensitizer, preserves beta-cell function, causes durable reduction in HbA1c, corrects multiple components of metabolic syndrome and improves nonalcoholic fatty liver disease/nonalcoholic steatohepatitis. Adverse effects (weight gain, fluid retention, fractures) must be considered, but are diminished with lower doses and are arguably outweighed by these multiple benefits. With healthcare expenses attributable to diabetes increasing rapidly, this cost-effective drug requires reconsideration in the therapeutic armamentarium for the disease.
Keyphrases
- cardiovascular events
- type diabetes
- cardiovascular disease
- weight gain
- glycemic control
- coronary artery disease
- healthcare
- metabolic syndrome
- adverse drug
- insulin resistance
- body mass index
- birth weight
- left ventricular
- weight loss
- heart failure
- clinical trial
- open label
- physical activity
- atrial fibrillation
- cardiovascular risk factors
- phase ii
- risk factors
- randomized controlled trial
- double blind
- phase iii
- adipose tissue
- placebo controlled
- health information
- anti inflammatory
- drug induced
- blood brain barrier
- community dwelling
- middle aged
- subarachnoid hemorrhage