Dapagliflozin has also been studied in patients whose type 2 diabetes was not well controlled with metformin alone (HbA1c 7–10%). The 546 patients were randomised to add a daily dose of dapagliflozin 2.5 mg, 5 mg, 10 mg or a placebo. After 24 weeks HbA1c concentrations had fallen significantly more, in the patients taking dapagliflozin, than the 0.3% reduction in the placebo group. The reductions were 0.67% with 2.5 mg, 0.7% with 5 mg and 0.84% with 10 mg. Significantly more of the patients taking dapagliflozin 10 mg reached an HbA1c of 7% or less than in the placebo group (40.6% vs 25.9%).3
Another option when metformin alone is ineffective is to add a sulfonylurea. This strategy has been compared with adding dapagliflozin in a 52-week trial of 814 patients with HbA1c concentrations of 6.5–10%. At the end of the year the addition of either glipizide or dapagliflozin had reduced HbA1c by a mean of 0.52%. While this outcome was equivalent, patients taking glipizide gained an average of 1.44 kg, but those taking dapagliflozin lost 3.22 kg.4
Dapagliflozin has also been assessed as an add-on treatment in patients whose diabetes was not controlled (HbA1c 7–10%) by a sulfonylurea. A total of 597 patients taking glimepiride were randomised to add dapagliflozin 2.5 mg, 5 mg, 10 mg or a placebo. After 24 weeks HbA1c had fallen by 0.13% in the placebo group, and in the dapagliflozin groups by 0.58% with 2.5 mg, 0.63% with 5 mg and 0.82% with 10 mg. All the patients lost weight. Those taking dapagliflozin 10 mg lost an average of 2.26 kg compared with a loss of 0.72 kg in the placebo group.5
Some patients with type 2 diabetes use insulin as well as oral antidiabetic drugs. The effect of adding dapagliflozin to such regimens was studied in a placebo-controlled trial of 71 patients. In this trial dapagliflozin 10 mg and 20 mg were used and the patients had their doses of insulin halved. After 12 weeks, HbA1c concentrations had increased by 0.09% in the placebo group, but decreased by 0.61% with 10 mg dapagliflozin and by 0.69% with 20 mg.6
Increasing glucose excretion causes an osmotic diuresis. This can be a problem in patients who are volume depleted or are taking loop diuretics. Glycosuria also increases the risk of urinary tract infections. In the clinical trials 4.8% of patients taking dapagliflozin 10 mg developed genital infections, such as vulvovaginitis or balanitis, compared with 0.9% of the placebo group. When used alone dapagliflozin does not appear to cause significant hypoglycaemia,1 however the risk increases in combination with a sulfonylurea.5
Dapagliflozin is the first of a new class of drugs. In addition to reducing HbA1c and weight, it also lowers systolic blood pressure by 1–5 mmHg. These effects could be beneficial, but longer-term studies will be needed to see if dapagliflozin improves the outcomes for patients with type 2 diabetes. These studies will also need to assess the safety of dapagliflozin. In the trials the relative risk of bladder, breast and prostate cancer was slightly increased. Until long-term data are available, dapagliflozin should probably only be used as an adjunct to treatment with drugs, such as metformin, which have more evidence to support them.