Abstract

To assess the extent of pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic interaction between vildagliptin, a potent and selective inhibitor of dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPP-4) enzyme, and voglibose, an α-glucosidase inhibitor widely prescribed in Japan, when coadministered in Japanese patients with Type 2 diabetes. In this open-label, randomized, 3-treatment, 3-period and 6-way crossover study, 24 Japanese patients with Type 2 diabetes received 50 mg vildagliptin twice daily; 50 mg vildagliptin twice daily co-administered with 0.2 mg voglibose three times daily; or 0.2 mg voglibose three times daily for 3 days in each period. Plasma concentrations of vildagliptin, DPP-4, glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), glucose, insulin, and glucagon were determined from blood samples collected at steady state. Exposure to vildagliptin 50 mg (area under the concentration-time curve from 0 to 12 hours (AUCτ,ss)) and maximum plasma concentration at steady state (Cmax,ss) was reduced by 23% and 34% respectively with co-administration of voglibose. The percentage of DPP-4 inhibition by vildagliptin remained unchanged when vildagliptin was given alone or co-administered with voglibose; maximum inhibition was 98.3 ± 1.4% (mean ± SD) for vildagliptin alone and 97.4 ± 1.1% with co-administration. Coadministration of vildagliptin and voglibose led to a greater increase in the active GLP-1 plasma concentration than did vildagliptin alone (geometric mean ratio 1.63 (90% CI, 1.30, 2.03), p = 0.0007). The combination of vildagliptin and voglibose also led to a significantly lower plasma glucose levels (p < 0.0001). Plasma vildagliptin levels were decreased when voglibose was co-administered, although DPP- 4 inhibition remained unchanged. Co-administration led to significantly better pharmacodynamic response compared with each treatment alone, including higher active GLP-1 and lower glucose levels. The results indicate that this coadministration may be beneficial in the clinical situation. Vildagliptin and voglibose treatments, alone or when co-administered, were well tolerated in Japanese patients with Type 2 diabetes.

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