Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Results from the UK cohort of SOLVE: Providing insights into the timing of insulin initiation in people with poorly controlled type 2 diabetes in routine clinical practice

Publication date:



Available online 27 December 2013


SOURCE:Primary Care Diabetes

Author(s): Kamlesh Khunti , Jiten Vora , Melanie Davies

AimsSOLVE was a large observational study of more than 17,000 insulin-na ve patients with type 2 diabetes, investigating basal insulin analogue initiation in a primary care setting across a diverse geographical area. The current analysis aimed to compare and contrast the results of the UK cohort with the previously published global population results.MethodsThis analysis compares the UK cohort of SOLVE (n=761) with the global population (n=17,374). Patients eligible for the study were those for whom a clinical decision had been made to initiate treatment with a basal insulin analogue once daily as an add-on to existing OAD therapy.ResultsThe UK cohort had a higher baseline HbA1c compared to the global population of SOLVE (9.8% vs. 8.9%, respectively) despite a shorter duration of disease, indicating that strict glycaemic targets set by international organisations are not being achieved in the UK. Following 24 weeks' treatment with insulin detemir, patients in the UK achieved a reduction in HbA1c of -1.3%, the same as the reduction achieved in the global population; however, a higher dose of insulin detemir was required in the UK than in the global population.ConclusionsFindings from the UK cohort of SOLVE show that it is possible to improve glycaemic control and reduce HbA1c in patients previously uncontrolled with oral antidiabetic drug therapy, in a primary setting, despite clinical inertia.
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