Guest guest Posted December 7, 2009 Report Share Posted December 7, 2009 The sulfonylureas as a drug class were associated with an excess all-cause mortality risk, and treatment with some of them was followed by more heart failure, compared with treatment with *metformin*, in a retrospective analysis encompassing >90 000 diabetics in a British general-practice data base [1]. " Our findings suggest a relatively unfavorable risk profile of sulfonylureas compared with metformin. This is consistent with the recommendations of the *American Diabetes Association* and *International Diabetes Federation*, which favor metformin as the initial treatment for type 2 diabetes, " write the authors, led by *Dr Ioanna Tzoulaki* (Imperial College London, UK), in a report published online December 3, 2009 in *BMJ*. Looking also at the thiazolidinediones (TZDs), Tzoulaki et al found that survival was significantly better on *pioglitazone* (Actos, Takeda Pharmaceuticals) compared with metformin and, in separate analyses, compared with *rosiglitazone* (Avandia, GlaxoKline)--although the latter finding's significance faded in a more fully adjusted statistical model. Venturing into less well-settled territory, their analysis also saw no increased risk of MI from treatment with TZDs in general or from rosiglitazone in particular. The finding is at odds with other recent studies that agreed with the 2007 meta-analysis from Nissen and Wolski [2] that launched a high-profile, still-continuing controversy over the drug's potential hazards. Full article: http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/713410?sssdmh=dm1.566018 & src=nldne & uac=12164\ 8MY Must register -- Ortiz, MS RD You know you're getting old, when Santa starts looking younger. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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