» Articles » PMID: 20590741

Pharmacokinetics of Dipeptidylpeptidase-4 Inhibitors

Overview
Specialty Endocrinology
Date 2010 Jul 2
PMID 20590741
Citations 84
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Type 2 diabetes (T2DM) is a complex disease combining defects in insulin secretion and insulin action. New compounds have been developed for improving glucose-induced insulin secretion and glucose control, without inducing hypoglycaemia or weight gain. Dipeptidylpeptidase-4 (DPP-4) inhibitors are new oral glucose-lowering agents, so-called incretin enhancers, which may be used as monotherapy or in combination with other antidiabetic compounds. Sitagliptin, vildaglipin and saxagliptin are already on the market in many countries, either as single agents or in fixed-dose combined formulations with metformin. Other DPP-4 inhibitors, such as alogliptin and linagliptin, are currently in late phase of development. The present paper summarizes and compares the main pharmacokinetics (PK) properties, that is, absorption, distribution, metabolism and elimination, of these five DPP-4 inhibitors. Available data were obtained in clinical trials performed in healthy young male subjects, patients with T2DM, and patients with either renal insufficiency or hepatic impairment. PK characteristics were generally similar in young healthy subjects and in middle-aged overweight patients with diabetes. All together gliptins have a good oral bioavailability which is not significantly influenced by food intake. PK/pharmacodynamics characteristics, that is, sufficiently prolonged half-life and sustained DPP-4 enzyme inactivation, generally allow one single oral administration per day for the management of T2DM; the only exception is vildagliptin for which a twice-daily administration is recommended because of a shorter half-life. DPP-4 inhibitors are in general not substrates for cytochrome P450 (except saxagliptin that is metabolized via CYP 3A4/A5) and do not act as inducers or inhibitors of this system. Several metabolites have been documented but most of them are inactive; however, the main metabolite of saxagliptin also exerts a significant DPP-4 inhibition and is half as potent as the parent compound. Renal excretion is the most important elimination pathway, except for linagliptin whose metabolism in the liver appears to be predominant. PK properties of gliptins, combined with their good safety profile, explain why no dose adjustment is necessary in elderly patients or in patients with mild to moderate hepatic impairment. As far as patients with renal impairment are concerned, significant increases in drug exposure for sitagliptin and saxagliptin have been reported so that appropriate reductions in daily dosages are recommended according to estimated glomerular filtration rate. The PK characteristics of DPP-4 inhibitors suggest that these compounds are not exposed to a high risk of drug-drug interactions. However, the daily dose of saxagliptin should be reduced when coadministered with potent CYP 3A4 inhibitors. In conclusion, besides their pharmacodynamic properties leading to effective glucose-lowering effect without inducing hypoglycaemia or weight gain, DPP-4 inhibitors show favourable PK properties, which contribute to a good efficacy/safety ratio for the management of T2DM in clinical practice.

Citing Articles

New Onset Diabetes After Organ Transplantation: Risk Factors, Treatment, and Consequences.

Popovic L, Bulum T Diagnostics (Basel). 2025; 15(3).

PMID: 39941214 PMC: 11816453. DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics15030284.


Renal Angptl4 is a key fibrogenic molecule in progressive diabetic kidney disease.

Srivastava S, Zhou H, Shenoi R, Morris M, Lainez-Mas B, Goedeke L Sci Adv. 2024; 10(49):eadn6068.

PMID: 39630889 PMC: 11616692. DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adn6068.


DPP-4 inhibitors sitagliptin and PF-00734,200 mitigate dopaminergic neurodegeneration, neuroinflammation and behavioral impairment in the rat 6-OHDA model of Parkinson's disease.

Yu S, Wang Y, Shen H, Bae E, Li Y, Sambamurti K Geroscience. 2024; 46(5):4349-4371.

PMID: 38563864 PMC: 11336009. DOI: 10.1007/s11357-024-01116-0.


Sitagliptin elevates plasma and CSF incretin levels following oral administration to nonhuman primates: relevance for neurodegenerative disorders.

Li Y, Vaughan K, Wang Y, Yu S, Bae E, Tamargo I Geroscience. 2024; 46(5):4397-4414.

PMID: 38532069 PMC: 11335710. DOI: 10.1007/s11357-024-01120-4.


Immediate Impact of Switching from Dipeptidyl Peptidase 4 (DPP4) Inhibitors to Low-Dose (0.3 mg) Liraglutide on Glucose Profiles: A Retrospective Observational Study.

Terui S, Igari M, Tsuno T, Okuyama T, Inoue R, Kyohara M Diabetes Ther. 2024; 15(5):1139-1153.

PMID: 38494572 PMC: 11043256. DOI: 10.1007/s13300-024-01557-y.