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Clinical Pharmacokinetics:
2001 - Volume 40 - Issue 9 - pp 641-659
Review Article

Clinical Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics of Insulin Aspart

Lindholm, Anders; Jacobsen, Lisbeth V.

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Abstract

Insulin aspart is a novel rapid-acting insulin analogue with improved subcutaneous absorption properties when compared with soluble human insulin. Pharmacokinetic studies show an absorption profile with a time to reach peak concentration (tmax) about half that of human insulin, a peak plasma drug concentration (Cmax) approximately twice as high and shorter residence time. The potency and bioavailability of insulin aspart are similar to those of human insulin.

The pharmacokinetics of insulin aspart have been studied in healthy Caucasian and Asian-Japanese volunteers, in patients with type 1 and 2 diabetes mellitus, and in children with diabetes, with both pre- and postprandial administration and during continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII). The pharmacokinetic profile was similar to that of another rapid-acting insulin analogue, insulin lispro, on the basis of published information for that agent.

Pharmacodynamic studies show a smaller excursion of postprandial glucose with insulin aspart injected subcutaneously just before the meal compared with soluble human insulin injected 30 minutes before the meal in patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus, and an equivalent control in patients with type 2 diabetes displaying residual insulin production. In a treatment study, glucose excursions evaluated from 24-hour glucose profiles showed less variability with insulin aspart compared with human insulin. Adverse events, including hypoglycaemia-induced ventricular repolarisation and hypoglycaemic threshold and awareness, did not differ between insulin aspart and human insulin. The available data suggest that subcutaneous injections of insulin aspart just before meals better mimic the endogenous insulin profile in blood compared with human insulin, resulting in improved glucose control in a meal-related insulin regimen.

This review summarises the clinical pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of insulin aspart in relation to human insulin and insulin lispro.

Copyright 2001 Adis International

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