For appropriate patients with type 2 diabetes...
Powerful A1C reductions vs metformin
In a study of patients uncontrolled with diet and exercise at 24 weeks, JANUMET delivered powerful A1C reductions 9
- Weight loss similar to metformin alone
- JANUMET provided significantly greater reductions in both PPG and FPG vs metformin alone
Selected Important Risk Information
There have been postmarketing reports of worsening renal function, including acute renal failure, sometimes requiring dialysis.
Measure renal function before initiation of therapy with JANUMET and periodically thereafter. In patients in whom development of renal dysfunction is anticipated, particularly in elderly patients, renal function should be assessed more frequently and JANUMET discontinued if evidence of renal impairment is present.
When lactic acidosis occurs, it is fatal in approximately 50% of cases. The reported incidence of lactic acidosis in patients receiving metformin is very low (approximately 0.03 cases/1000 patient-years, with approximately 0.015 fatal cases/1000 patient-years). Reported cases have occurred primarily in diabetic patients with significant renal insufficiency, including both intrinsic renal disease and renal hypoperfusion, often in the setting of multiple concomitant medical/surgical problems and multiple concomitant medications.
JANUMET: Study evaluating initial combination therapy 3,6,9,10,55
Objective
To assess the glycemic efficacy and safety of JANUMET in patients with type 2 diabetes who had inadequate glycemic control (A1C 7.5%–11%) on diet and exercise.
Study design
Patients participated in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, factorial study. Patients were randomized into 1 of 6 treatment groups: JANUMET 50/500 mg bid, JANUMET 50/1000 mg bid, metformin 500 mg bid, metformin 1000 mg bid, sitagliptin 100 mg once daily, or placebo. After a 24-week, placebo-controlled period, patients receiving placebo were switched in a blinded manner to metformin (beginning with 500 mg/day and uptitrated weekly in 500-mg increments to 2000 mg/day); all other patients continued on the same treatment throughout a 30-week continuation phase. The primary end point was measured after 24 weeks of treatment (phase A). The study continued with a 30-week continuation (phase B), followed by a 50-week extension period. In addition, this study included patients (n>117) with more severe hyperglycemia (A1C >11% or blood glucose >280 mg/dL) who were treated with twice-daily, open-label JANUMET 50/1000 mg.
Enrolled patient population
Patients aged 18 to 78 years (1) not on an antihyperglycemic agent, (2) on a single antihyperglycemic agent, or (3) on dual-agent oral combination therapy.
End points
Primary: A1C change at week 24.
Secondary: Change at week 24 in FPG; fructosamine; and glucose, insulin, and C-peptide measured at 0, 60, and 120 minutes after a meal.



