Scott J Pilla, Isabelle J Wang, Olive Tang, Nancy L Schoenborn, Cynthia M Boyd, Michael P Bancks, Nestoras N Mathioudakis, Nisa M Maruthur
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A National Physician Survey Examining Switching From Sulfonylureas or Insulin to Newer Diabetes Medications.
This study was a national survey of U.S. physicians in general medicine, geriatrics, or endocrinology who were asked what medication change they would make for adults with type 2 diabetes taking sulfonylureas or insulin with an A1C below their individualized goal. Responding physicians switched the hypoglycemia-causing medication a median of 4 times (interquartile range 1-9) among 27 opportunities and selected dipeptidyl peptidase 4 inhibitors most often when switching. Sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitors were selected less frequently, including when indicated for cardiovascular and renal comorbidities, but significantly more often among physicians caring for a greater proportion of patients with private health insurance. Overcoming barriers to switching hypoglycemia-causing medications may help to reduce rates of hypoglycemia while targeting cardiovascular and renal comorbidities.
期刊介绍:
The mission of Clinical Diabetes is to provide primary care providers and all clinicians involved in the care of people with diabetes with information on advances and state-of-the-art care for people with diabetes. Clinical Diabetes is also a forum for discussing diabetes-related problems in practice, medical-legal issues, case studies, digests of recent research, and patient education materials.