Janumet
Janumet
Generic Name
Janumet
Mechanism
- *Sitagliptin*
- Inhibits dipeptidyl‑peptidase‑4 (DPP‑4), preventing degradation of incretin hormones GLP‑1 and GIP.
- Increases insulin secretion and suppresses glucagon release in a glucose‑dependent manner, leading to improved post‑prandial glucose control.
- *Metformin*
- Decreases hepatic gluconeogenesis and improves insulin sensitivity in peripheral tissues.
- Enhances GLUT‑4 translocation, increasing glucose uptake by adipose and muscle cells.
- Reduces intestinal glucose absorption.
Combined, they provide complementary mechanisms that lower fasting and post‑prandial glucose levels while minimizing hypoglycaemia risk.
Pharmacokinetics
| Parameter | Sitagliptin (per dose) | Metformin (per dose) |
| Absorption | Rapid; peak plasma conc. ~1 h | Rapid; peak plasma conc. ~1 h |
| Oral bioavailability | ~83 % | ~50–60 % |
| Half‑life | 12 h (excretion unchanged) | 5 h (renally eliminated) |
| Metabolism | Minimal; negligible hepatic metabolism | Not metabolised appreciably |
| Elimination | Renal excretion unchanged (creatinine clearance dependent) | Renal excretion unchanged |
| Food effect | No clinically relevant interaction | No clinically relevant interaction |
Renal function drastically affects Sitagliptin clearance; dose adjustment is required for CrCl < 30 mL/min. Metformin is contraindicated for CrCl < 30 mL/min due to lactic acidosis risk.
Indications
- Management of type 2 diabetes mellitus in adults.
- Used add‑on to diet, exercise, and/or metformin monotherapy.
- Can also be added to other oral antidiabetic agents (e.g., sulfonylureas, thiazolidinediones) if tolerated.
- Not approved for type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis.
Contraindications
- Contraindicated in patients with:
- Renal impairment (CrCl < 30 mL/min).
- Pregnancy and lactation.
- Significant hepatic dysfunction (Cirrhosis, chronic hepatitis).
- Warnings:
- Lactic acidosis: rare but serious; avoid in patients with renal failure, metformin-associated lactic acidosis risk.
- Hypoglycaemia: minimal risk with Sitagliptin alone; risk increases if combined with insulin or sulfonylureas.
- Pancreatitis: rare, monitor symptoms.
Dosing
| Regimen | Dosage | Notes |
| Janumet 50/500 mg | 1 tablet once daily (± 30 min before eating) | First 8 weeks: low dose if CrCl 30‑60 mL/min. |
| Janumet 100/500 mg | 1 tablet once daily after first week if tolerated | Use at 1 week if fasting glucose > 130 mg/dL and HbA1c > 8.0 %. |
• Titration:
1. Start at 50/500 mg once daily.
2. After 4 weeks, increase to 100/500 mg if glycaemic targets not met.
3. For renal function decline, hold or reduce dose per CrCl category.
• Administration: Swallow whole; optional in water. Not crushable or chewable.
• Missed dose: Take as soon as remembered; skip if next dose within 12 h.
Adverse Effects
Common (≥ 1 % frequency)
• Gastrointestinal: nausea, diarrhoea, vomiting, abdominal cramps
• Upper respiratory infections
• Headache
Serious (rare)
• Lactic acidosis (symptoms: muscle pain, fatigue, abdominal pain, dyspnea)
• Renal impairment exacerbation
• Hypoglycaemia (especially with insulin or sulfonylureas)
• Pancreatitis (abdominal pain, nausea)
• Hypersensitivity reactions (rash, angioedema)
Monitoring
| Parameter | Frequency | Rationale |
| HbA1c | Every 3 months | Assess glycaemic control |
| Fasting plasma glucose | 2–4 weeks after initiation or dose change | Quick assessment of response |
| Serum creatinine / eGFR | At baseline, every 3 months, or after any renal event | Adjust Sitagliptin dose |
| Liver function tests | At baseline, monitor annually | Rare hepatotoxicity |
| Blood counts & electrolytes | Baseline, annually | Monitor for lactic acidosis markers |
| Symptoms of lactic acidosis | Throughout therapy | Early recognition |
Clinical Pearls
- Low hypoglycaemia risk: Sitagliptin’s glucose‑dependent action makes it safer to combine with Metformin without increasing hypoglycaemia, unless additional insulinogenic agents are used.
- Weight neutral: Unlike sulfonylureas or insulin, Janumet neither promotes nor causes significant weight gain, ideal for cardio‑metabolic risk management.
- Renal-based dosing: Sitagliptin requires dose adjustment for CrCl 30–60 mL/min, but Metformin’s safety threshold is more stringent (< 30 mL/min); keep both drugs under close renal surveillance.
- Lactic acidosis vigilance: Although rare (< 1 /10,000), patients with renal or hepatic compromise should be screened for symptoms before initiating Metformin.
- Pancreatitis risk: While evidence is limited, patient education on abdominal pain and prompt evaluation can mitigate severe outcomes.
- Administration timing: Taken once daily, food does not affect absorption, but aligning dosing with the first meal can reduce GI discomfort.
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• Key pharmacology terms: *DPP‑4 inhibitor, GLP‑1, Metformin, hepatic gluconeogenesis, insulin sensitivity, hypoglycaemia, lactic acidosis, creatinine clearance, HbA1c.*
These concise yet comprehensive points should serve medical students and practice‑based clinicians as a quick reference for Janumet’s pharmacodynamic profile, clinical use, safety, and monitoring.