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endocrine:biguanides:metformin

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Metformin

Metformin
Brand Names Glucophage®, Glucophage XR®
Drug Class Biguanide
Mechanism AMPK activation
Route Oral
Hypoglycemia Risk Low
Weight Effect Neutral / ↓
Renal Adjustment Yes
Pregnancy Avoid in advanced renal failure
FDA Approval 1994

Metformin

Metformin is a biguanide and first-line therapy for Type 2 Diabetes.

It lowers blood glucose primarily by reducing hepatic glucose production and improving insulin sensitivity.

It does NOT increase insulin secretion and carries minimal hypoglycemia risk.

Diabetes Pharmacology


Mechanism of Action

Metformin primarily reduces hepatic gluconeogenesis.

The dominant mechanism involves inhibition of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation in hepatocytes.

Specifically:

  • Inhibits mitochondrial respiratory chain complex I
  • Decreases ATP production
  • Increases intracellular AMP and ADP
  • Raises the AMP:ATP ratio

Elevated AMP leads to:

  • Inhibition of key gluconeogenic enzymes
  • Suppression of hepatic glucose production
  • Reduced fasting glucose levels

AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) activation occurs secondarily and contributes to:

  • Increased fatty acid oxidation
  • Decreased lipogenesis
  • Improved peripheral insulin sensitivity

Importantly:

  • AMPK activation is not required for metformin’s glucose-lowering effect.
  • The primary glucose effect is suppression of hepatic gluconeogenesis.

Additional mechanisms:

  • Decreased intestinal glucose absorption
  • Increased endogenous GLP-1 levels
  • Alteration of gut microbiome

Net Result:

  • Reduced hepatic glucose output
  • Improved insulin sensitivity
  • Lower fasting glucose

Clinical Effects

  • Moderate HbA1c reduction
  • Weight neutral or mild weight loss
  • Low hypoglycemia risk
  • Mild triglyceride reduction

Metformin is first-line therapy in most patients with Type 2 Diabetes unless contraindicated.


Cardiometabolic Impact

Metformin:

  • Improves insulin resistance
  • Modestly reduces cardiovascular risk (UKPDS data)
  • Does NOT cause weight gain
  • Does NOT cause edema

However, it does NOT provide the same heart failure or ASCVD benefit as:

Cardiovascular Pharmacology


Indications

  • Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus
  • Prediabetes (select patients)
  • Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (off-label)

Dosing Considerations

  • Start low and titrate gradually
  • Extended-release formulations improve GI tolerance
  • Take with meals to reduce GI side effects

Adverse Effects

Common:

  • Nausea
  • Diarrhea
  • Abdominal discomfort

Serious (rare):

  • Lactic acidosis
  • Vitamin B12 deficiency (long-term use)

Lactic acidosis risk is extremely low but increases in:

  • Severe renal failure
  • Hypoxia
  • Sepsis
  • Shock

Monitor:

  • Renal function
  • Vitamin B12 levels in long-term therapy

Contraindications

  • Severe renal impairment
  • Acute metabolic acidosis
  • Unstable hemodynamic states

Temporarily hold:

  • During acute illness
  • Prior to iodinated contrast (depending on renal function)

Metformin vs Other Antihyperglycemics

Compared to:

Metformin remains foundational therapy but is often combined with cardioprotective agents.


Clinical Pearls

  • Inhibits mitochondrial complex I
  • Raises AMP → suppresses gluconeogenesis
  • AMPK activation is secondary
  • First-line in Type 2 Diabetes
  • Weight neutral
  • Monitor B12 long-term
  • Rare lactic acidosis risk

endocrine/biguanides/metformin.1770995006.txt.gz · Last modified: by andrew2393cns