Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Once-weekly insulin treatment for diabetic cats
By C. Gilor et al.·Published in Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine·2021·View original on Semantic Scholar →
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Original publication title: An ultra‐long‐acting recombinant insulin for the treatment of diabetes mellitus in cats
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of five cats with diabetes was switched from daily insulin injections to a new insulin treatment that only requires a weekly injection. Over seven weeks, the cats showed no worsening of their diabetes symptoms, and their blood sugar levels remained stable without any side effects. This new treatment could make managing diabetes in cats easier for pet owners, as it reduces the number of injections needed. Further studies are planned to confirm these findings.
People also search for: cat diabetes treatment · weekly insulin for cats · managing cat diabetes at home
Abstract
Abstract Background Treatment of diabetes mellitus (DM) in cats typically requires insulin injections q12h‐q24h, posing a major compliance barrier for caregivers. Novel treatments enabling decreased injection frequency while maintaining safety are highly desirable. Insulin fused with feline immunoglobulin fragment crystallizable (Fc) has an ultra‐long plasma half‐life because it recycles through cells where it is protected from proteolysis. Hypothesis Glycemic control can be achieved in diabetic cats with a recombinant fusion protein of a synthetic insulin and feline Fc (AKS‐267c) administered SC weekly. Animals Five cats with spontaneous DM. Methods Cats previously controlled using insulin glargine q12h were transitioned to once‐weekly injection of AKS‐267c. The dose of AKS‐267c was titrated weekly for 7 weeks based on continuous glucose monitoring. Clinical signs, body weight, fructosamine concentrations, and mean interstitial glucose concentrations (IG) were compared between baseline (week 0, on insulin glargine) and the last week of treatment. Data were assessed for normality and compared using parametric or nonparametric paired tests (as appropriate). Results After 7 weeks of once‐weekly injections, compared to baseline, there were no significant changes in clinical signs, body weight (median [range] gain, 0.1 kg [−0.1 to +0.7]; P = .5), fructosamine (−60 mmol/L [−338 to +206]; P = .6), and mean IG concentrations (change = −153 mmol/L [−179 to +29]; P = .3), and no adverse reactions were reported. Conclusion Successful control of clinical signs and maintenance of glycemia was achieved with this once‐weekly novel insulin treatment. The efficacy and safety of this novel formulation should be further assessed in a large clinical trial.
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Search related cases →Original publication on Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/34190365