Title of article :
Linagliptin versus sitagliptin in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus: a network meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials
Author/Authors :
Keshavarz, Khosro Health Human Resources Research Center - Department of Health Economics - School of Management and Information Sciences - Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz , Lotfi, Farhad Health Human Resources Research Center - Department of Health Economics - School of Management and Information Sciences - Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz , Sanati, Ehsan Department of Pharmacoeconomics and Pharmaceutical Administration - Faculty of Pharmacy - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran , Salesi, Mahmood Atherosclerosis Research center - Baqiyatallah University of Medical Sciences, Tehran , Hashemi-Meshkini, Amir Department of Pharmacoeconomics and Pharmaceutical Administration - Faculty of Pharmacy - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran , Jafari, Mojtaba Health Human Resources Research Center - Department of Health Economics - School of Management and Information Sciences , Mojahedian, Mohammad M Department of Pharmacoeconomics and Pharmaceutical Administration - Faculty of Pharmacy - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran , Najafi, Behzad Iranian center of Excellence in health management - Department of health services management - School of management and medical informatics - Tabriz University of medical sciences , Nikfar, Shekoufeh Department of Pharmacoeconomics and Pharmaceutical Administration - Faculty of Pharmacy and Evidence-Based Medicine Group - Pharmaceutical Sciences Research Center - Tehran University of Medical Sciences
Abstract :
Background: Diabetes is one of the most common chronic and costly diseases worldwide and type 2 diabetes is the most common type which accounts for about 90% of cases with diabetes. New medication-therapy regimens
such as those containing linagliptin alone or in combination with other medications (within the category of DDP-4
inhibitors) must be evaluated in terms of efficacy and compared with other currently used drugs and then enter
the medication list of the country. Hence, this study aimed to compare the clinical efficacy of the two drugs, i.e.
linagliptin and sitagliptin, in patients with type 2 diabetes.
Methods: A systematic review was conducted to identify all clinical trials published by 2015 which compared the
two drugs in patients with type 2 diabetes. Using keywords such as “linagliptin”, “type 2 diabetes mellitus”, “sitagliptin”
and related combinations, we searched databases including Scopus, PubMed, and Web of Science. The quality
of the selected studies was evaluated using the Jadad score. Considering primary and secondary outcomes
extracted from the reviewed studies, a network meta-analysis was used to conduct a systematic comparison
between the two studied drugs.
Results: This network meta-analysis included 32 studies (Linagliptin vs PLB: n = 8, Sitagliptin vs PLB: n = 13,
Linagliptin + MET vs PLB + MET: n = 4, and Sitagliptin + MET vs PLB + MET: n = 7) and a total of 13,747
patients. The results showed no significant difference between linagliptin and sitagliptin in terms of key
efficacy and safety outcomes such as HbA1c changes from baseline, body weight change from baseline,
percentage of patients achieving HbA1c <7, and percentage of patients experiencing hypoglycemic events
(p > 0.05). The results showed that the efficacy of the two drug regimens was the same.
Conclusions: Based on the results, there was no significant difference between the two drugs, i.e. linagliptin
and sitagliptin, in terms of efficacy; in other words, the efficacy of the two drugs was the same. Therefore, the use of these two drugs depends on their availability and cost.
Keywords :
Linagliptin , Type 2 diabetes mellitus , Sitagliptin , Network meta-analysis
Journal title :
Daru:Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences