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. 2015 Feb 15;6(1):30–36. doi: 10.4239/wjd.v6.i1.30

Table 1.

Published articles about the drug-induced hypoglycemia in patients with diabetes

Ref. Subjects Year Nation Setting OAD Insulin Combination
Kim et al[27] Type 2 (n = 298) 2004-2009 South Korea The Emergency Department of two general hospitals Glimepiride (24.2%) Gliclazide (5.4%) Glibenclamide (8.4%) NPH/RI (38.3%) Premixed (11.1%) Glargine/Detemir (13.1%)
Tsujimoto et al[28] Type 1 (n = 85) 2006-2012 Japan Retrospective cohort study in one medical center Insulin (100%)
Type 2 (n = 305) SU (42.3%) Others (6.6%) Insulin (51.1%)
Signorovitch et al[29] Type 2 not treated with insulin (n = 5582) 1998-2010 United States US-based employer claims database SU (38.2%) Biguanides (56.3%) a-GI (0.9%) Sitagliptin (1.0%) Incretin mimetics (0.5%) TZD (14.9%)
Moisan et al[30] Not determined (n = 3575) 2000-2008 Canada Inception cohort study using the database of the Quebec health insurance board and the Quebec registry of hospitalizations SU (32.1%) Metformin (45.0%) SU + Metformin (12.3%) Others (2.1%) Insulin (8.5%)
Hsu et al[31] Type 2 (n = 500) 1998-2009 Taiwan A nationwide population-based study using the National Health Insurance Research Database SU (67.8%) Others (61.4%) Insulin (24.2%)
Holstein et al[32] Type 1 (n = 92) 1997-2000 German A longitudinal population-based study Conventional (27.2%) Intensified (69.6%) CSII (3.3%)
Type 1 (n = 121) 2007-2010 Conventional (6.6%) Intensified (79.3%) CSII (13.2%)
Type 2 (n = 148) 1997-2000 SU (30.4%) Conventional (52.7%) Intensified (0%) CSII (0%) SU + Insulin (16.9%)
Type 2 (n = 225) 2007-2010 SU (29.8%) Metformin (0.9%) Conventional (40.8%) Intensified (21.8%) CSII (0%) SU + Insulin (6.7%)
Ha et al[33] Not determined (n = 320) 2006-2009 South Korea Retrospective analysis of hypoglycemic patients presented to emergency room of Uijeongbu St. Mary’s Hospital Glimepiride (29.7%) Glibenclamide (4.7%) Gliclazide (4.7%) Gliquidone (1.3%) Glipizide (0.9%) Others (24.7%) Insulin (29.1%) SU + Insulin (5.0%)
Geller et al[34] Not determined (n = 8100) 2007-2011 United States Nationally representative public health surveillance of adverse drug events among insulin-treated patients seeking emergency department care Insulin (83.4%) Insulin + Biguanide (8.5%) SU (6.6%) TZD (3.6%) DPP-4 inhibitors (1.3%) GLP-1 analogues (0.2%) Others (0.9%)
Ben-Ami et al[35] Type 1 and 2 (n = 99) 1986-1992 Israel Retrospective analysis of the medical record in Rambam Medical Center Glyburide (51.5%) Glyburide + Metformin (10.2%) Insulin (23.2%) Insulin + Glyburide (13.1%) Insulin + Metformin (2.0%)
Quilliam et al[36] Type 2 (n = 536581) 2004-2008 United States Retrospective cohort designed to assess the rate and costs of hypoglycemia among working-age patients with type 2 diabetes in the MarketScan database SU (42.3%) Metformin (75.7%) TZD (33.3%) Other oral agents (4.4%) Insulin (6.0%) Other injectable agents (2.7%)
Parsaik et al[37] Type 1 (n = 210) 2003-2009 United States Population-basedstudy Simple insulin (10.0%) MDI (67.0%) CSII(18.0%) OAD + Insulin (1.0%)
Type 2 (n = 503) OAD (23.0%) Simple insulin (27.0%) MDI (37.0%) CSII (1.0%) OAD + Insulin(11.0%)

a-GI: a-glucosidase inhibitors; CSII: Continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion; DPP-4: Dipeptidyl peptidase-4; GLP-1: Glucagon-like peptide-1; MDI: Multiple daily insulin injection; NPH: Neutral protamine Hagedorn; OAD: Oral anti-diabetic drug; RI: Regular insulin; SU: Sulfonylurea; TZD: Thiazolidinediones.