What is known and objective: Glibenclamide is a prescribed glucose-lowering medication for diabetes, but there are interindividual variations in the therapeutic response. In this cross-sectional study, the aim was to explore the association of genetic variants in CYP2C9, ABCC8, KCNJ11 and TCF7L2 with good glycaemic control in Mexican type 2 diabetes (T2D) treated with glibenclamide.
Methods: Patients with T2D receiving treatment with glibenclamide or glibenclamide plus metformin were included. Patients with A1C ≤ 7% were considered to have good glycaemic control, whereas patients with A1C ≥ 8% were considered having poor glycaemic control. Genotyping was performed by real-time PCR using TaqMan probes for the genetic variants. Association was performed by calculating OR with 95% confidence intervals (95% CI). For the multivariate analysis, a multiple logistic regression was performed including the confounding variables age, exercised, BMI, glibenclamide dose, time with T2D and concomitant metformin.
Results and discussion: Four hundred and four patients were included in the study, median age of the participants was 50 years (IQR 11.0), the median time with disease was 6 years (IQR 8.0), 118 (29.2%) were men, and 243 (60.1%) received glibenclamide in combination with metformin. CYP2C9*3 variant was associated with good glycaemic control (OR = 2.747 [95% CI, 1.194-6.324]), whereas the variants, CYP2C9*2, TCF7L2 rs7903146 and rs12255372, ABCC8 rs757110 and KCNJ11 rs5219, were not. In the multivariate analysis, the CYP2C9*3 variant maintained its association (OR = 2.779 [95% CI, 1.142-6.763]).
What is new and conclusion: The findings suggest that CYP2C9*3 genetic variant independently contributes to good glycaemic control of patients with type 2 diabetes treated with glibenclamide.
Keywords: ABCC8; CYP2C9; KCNJ11; TCF7L2; glibenclamide; glycaemic control; type 2 diabetes.
© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.