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Published 2008-12-01 00:00:00
This page contains additional content about the article Rosiglitazone (Avandia) and rosiglitazone with metformin (Avandamet) for type 2 diabetes mellitus, first published in NPS RADAR in April 2004, and last updated in December 2008.
Diarrhoea, nausea and abdominal bloating are common with metformin10 and are dose related.
Often transient: although they are reported to occur in 20–30% of patients, fewer than 5% of patients need to discontinue metformin.10
Minimise by:
Opinions vary on the degree of renal impairment at which metformin should not be used.
Estimating an individual's creatinine clearance is a more accurate measure of renal function than serum creatinine concentration. Use the Cockcroft—Gault equation to estimate creatinine clearance:
|
Creatinine clearance (mL/min) = |
(140 – age [years]) ( bodyweight (kg) 815 ( serum creatinine (mmol/L) |
Use either actual or ideal bodyweight, whichever is lower. For females, multiply the result of the equation by 0.85. This approach is invalid in severe renal insufficiency or with rapidly changing renal function.
Metformin should be avoided or discontinued when creatinine clearance is < 30 mL/min, and used with extreme caution when creatinine clearance is 30–50 mL/min (the dosage should not exceed 1 g/day in these patients).37
Lactic acidosis is a rare adverse effect of metformin use (three cases per 100,000 patient–years38) but serious when it does occur, with up to 50% of cases fatal.36,37
A Cochrane review did not find a single case of lactic acidosis reported in trials (n = 206) with more than 47,000 patient–years of metformin use despite many of the trials including some patients with at least one contraindication to metformin use.39
In most cases of lactic acidosis with metformin reported to the Australian Adverse Drug Reactions Advisory Committee, known risk factors were identified.36 Risk factors for lactic acidosis include:
References for this article are found on the page Rosiglitazone (Avandia) and rosiglitazone with metformin (Avandamet) for type 2 diabetes mellitus, first published in NPS RADAR in April 2004, and last updated December 2008.
Date published: 2008-12-01 00:00:00
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