Indication |
For use as an adjunct to diet and exercise in adult patients (18
years and older) with NIDDM. May also be used for the management of
metabolic and reproductive abnormalities associated with polycystic
ovary syndrome (PCOS). |
Pharmacodynamics |
Metformin is an oral antihyperglycemic agent that improves
glucose tolerance in patients with NIDDM, lowering both basal and
postprandial plasma glucose. Metformin is not chemically or
pharmacologically related to any other class of oral antihyperglycemic
agents. Unlike sulfonylureas, metformin does not produce hypoglycemia in
either patients with NIDDM or healthy subjects and does not cause
hyperinsulinemia. Metformin does not affect insulin secretion. |
Mechanism of action |
Metformin's mechanisms of action differ from other classes of oral
antihyperglycemic agents. Metformin decreases blood glucose levels by
decreasing hepatic glucose production, decreasing intestinal absorption
of glucose, and improving insulin sensitivity by increasing peripheral
glucose uptake and utilization. These effects are mediated by the
initial activation by metformin of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), a
liver enzyme that plays an important role in insulin signaling, whole
body energy balance, and the metabolism of glucose and fats. Activation
of AMPK is required for metformin's inhibitory effect on the production
of glucose by liver cells. Increased peripheral utilization of glucose
may be due to improved insulin binding to insulin receptors. Metformin
administration also increases AMPK activity in skeletal muscle. AMPK is
known to cause GLUT4 deployment to the plasma membrane, resulting in
insulin-independent glucose uptake. The rare side effect, lactic
acidosis, is thought to be caused by decreased liver uptake of serum
lactate, one of the substrates of gluconeogenesis. In those with healthy
renal function, the slight excess is simply cleared. However, those
with severe renal impairment may accumulate clinically significant serum
lactic acid levels. Other conditions that may precipitate lactic
acidosis include severe hepatic disease and acute/decompensated heart
failure.
|
Absorption |
Absorbed over 6 hours, bioavailability is 50 to 60% under fasting
conditions. Administration with food decreases and delays absorption.
Some evidence indicates that the level of absorption is not
dose-related, suggesting that absorption occurs through a saturable
process. Limited data from animal and human cell cultures indicate that
absorption occurs through a passive, non-saturable process, possibly
involving a paracellular route. Peak action occurs 3 hours after oral
administration. |
Volume of distribution |
654 L for metformin 850 mg administered as a single dose. The
volume of distribution following IV administration is 63-276 L, likely
due to less binding in the GI tract and/or different methods used to
determine volume of distribution. |
Protein binding |
Metformin is negligibly bound to plasma proteins. |
Metabolism |
Metformin is not metabolized. |
Route of elimination |
Intravenous single-dose studies in normal subjects demonstrate
that metformin is excreted unchanged in the urine and does not undergo
hepatic metabolism (no metabolites have been identified in humans) nor
biliary excretion. Approximately 90% of the drug is eliminated in 24
hours in those with healthy renal function. Renal clearance of metformin
is approximately 3.5 times that of creatinine clearance, indicating the
tubular secretion is the primary mode of metformin elimination. |
Half life |
6.2 hours. Duration of action is 8-12 hours. |
Clearance |
718-1552 mL/minute following single oral dose of 0.5-1.5 g.
Metformin is removed by hemodialysis at a rate of approximately 170
ml/min under good hemodynamic conditions. |
Toxicity |
Acute oral toxicity (LD50): 350 mg/kg [Rabbit]. It
would be expected that adverse reactions of a more intense character
including epigastric discomfort, nausea, and vomiting followed by
diarrhea, drowsiness, weakness, dizziness, malaise and headache might be
seen. |