Sitagliptin
Sitagliptin
Generic Name
Sitagliptin
Mechanism
Sitagliptin competitively inhibits DPP‑4, an enzyme that degrades incretin hormones (GLP‑1 and GIP).
• ↑ Incretin availability → increased glucose‑dependent insulin secretion and decreased glucagon release.
• ΔHbA1c ≈ 0.9 – 1.2 % in monotherapy; additive benefit when combined with metformin or sulfonylureas.
• Effects are insulin‑stimulating only in hyperglycemic states, minimizing hypoglycemia risk.
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Pharmacokinetics
- Formulation: 100 mg tablets (100 mg oral dose).
- Absorption: ~85 % bioavailability; peak plasma concentration (~3 h).
- Distribution: 246 mL/kg; protein binding ~70 %.
- Metabolism: Minimal CYP450 involvement; mainly renal excretion.
- Half‑life: ~12 h (once‑daily dosing).
- Renal clearance: 61 % unchanged, 30 % as glucuronide metabolites.
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Indications
- Adults and adolescents ≥16 yr with T2DM uncontrolled on diet + exercise or as adjunct to other oral hypoglycemics.
- Combination therapy: with metformin, sulfonylureas, insulin, or thiazolidinediones.
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Contraindications
- Contraindicated: hypersensitivity to sitagliptin or any component.
- Renal impairment: CKD stage 4–5 (eGFR < 30 mL/min/1.73 m²) – avoid or use lowest dose per label.
- Pregnancy/Lactation: Category B – not well‑studied; use only if benefits outweigh risks.
- Concomitant use with other DPP‑4 inhibitors or gliptins—avoid overlap due to risk of hypoglycemia or pancreatitis.
Warnings
• Pancreatitis: Report any upper abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting.
• Allergic reactions: rash, angioedema, anaphylaxis.
• Infections: Upper respiratory tract infections, especially in patients on concomitant immunosuppressants.
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Dosing
| Renal Function | Dose (mg/day) | Frequency | Notes |
| eGFR ≥ 60 mL/min | 100 mg | Once daily | 100 mg tablets; no dose adjustment needed |
| eGFR 30–59 mL/min | 50 mg | Once daily | 50 mg tablets; maintain 30‑day interval |
| eGFR < 30 mL/min | Avoid | Use 25 mg tablets in rare case; monitor closely |
• Administration: At any time of day with or without food.
• Refill: Shown under "No. of refills: 99 (???)" in many formularies.
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Adverse Effects
Common (≥ 2 %):
• Nasopharyngitis
• Headache
• Upper respiratory tract infection
• Weight Neutral (often used as a reassuring feature)
Serious (≤ 2 %):
• Acute pancreatitis (1:1,000‑3,000)
• Hypersensitivity (rash, fever, angioedema)
• Severe infections (e.g., cellulitis, candidiasis)
• Death (unlikely but reported in association with severe pancreatitis)
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Monitoring
- Baseline & Follow‑up:
- Fasting glucose & HbA1c (every 3 months)
- Serum creatinine, eGFR (trimonthly while on dialysis or CKD)
- Adverse Reaction Surveillance:
- Monitor for abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting → pancreatitis screening.
- Watch for signs of infection; consider prophylaxis in immunocompromised.
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Clinical Pearls
- Low Hypoglycemia Risk:
- Glucose‑dependent insulin release keeps hypoglycemia rare; only a concern if combined with insulin or sulfonylureas.
- Renal Dosing Simplicity:
- One‑dose adjustment (100 → 50 mg) for eGFR 30‑59 mL/min simplifies patient adherence.
- Weight Management:
- Sitagliptin is weight neutral, making it advantageous for overweight/obese T2DM patients (esp. in multimorbidity).
- Pancreatitis Signal Strength:
- Maintain a low threshold for imaging (CT/MRI) if patients report epigastric discomfort, regardless of serum amylase/lipase levels which may be normal initially.
- Drug‑Drug Interactions:
- Preserve as the majority of metabolism is via renal excretion; limited CYP inhibition.
- Avoid co‑administration with other incretin-based drugs to prevent exacerbated hypoglycemia.
- Patient Education:
- Counsel patients on recognizing signs of pancreatitis, rare anaphylaxis, and the importance of regular glucose checks, especially during illness or changes in renal function.
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• Sitagliptin remains a cornerstone oral agent in the T2DM armamentarium, combining efficacy, safety, and ease of use—critical factors in optimizing patient outcomes.