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      Anti-diabetic medications: How to make a choice?

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          Abstract

          Diabetes is the third commonest chronic illness in children following asthma and epilepsy. More recently the overall prevalence of diabetes in children and adults continued to increase dramatically. In children, this has partially been contributed to by the pandemic of obesity. Understandably, this posed an economic burden on health authorities and countries dealing with significant morbidity of the disease with potentially serious complications. In parallel to this, more therapeutic discoveries expanded the list of choice for available medications. We hypothesize that specialist clinicians are requested by an authority to submit a report of prioritization for anti-diabetic drugs. The authority new policy is to purchase for only three of anti-diabetic medications among a long list of old and new drugs. We gave a recommendation here in response to this request based on different properties of these medications and also based on the largest known clinical trials in the field. Some may have a different choice for a third medication besides insulin and metformin and physicians in many clinical settings may have a choice of more than three at a time. However, we, at least, provide here a thorough review of these drugs, their mechanistic of action, benefits and side effects to facilitate a better choice for individual patients according to underlying pathophysiological cause, other medical needs and tolerance to different medications. Paediatricians are increasingly managing adolescents with type 2 diabetes these days. Hence, we wrote this review as a quick reference guide to anti-diabetic medications to which they might be less familiar.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Sudan J Paediatr
          Sudan J Paediatr
          Sudanese Journal of Paediatrics
          Discover Publishing Group
          0256-4408
          2017
          : 17
          : 2
          : 11-20
          Affiliations
          King Saud Bin Abdulaziz University for Health Sciences and King Abdullah Specialized Children’s Hospital, King Abdulaziz Medical City, Ministry of National Guard Health Affairs, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
          Author notes
          Correspondence to: Amir Babiker, MBBS (U of K), FRCPCH (UK), CCT (UK), MSc Endocrinology and Diabetes (UK), Assistant Professor and Consultant Pediatric Endocrinologist, King Saud Bin Abdulaziz University for Health Sciences and King Abdullah Specialized Children’s Hospital, Ministry of National Guard Health Affairs, PO Box 22490, Riyadh 11426, Saudi Arabia. Email: babikeram1@ 123456ngha.med.sa
          Article
          PMC5845451 PMC5845451 5845451
          10.24911/SJP.2017.2.12
          5845451
          29545660
          5bdbafc9-8b05-4dcb-b654-45e34847943f
          Copyright © Sudanese Association of Pediatricians.
          History
          Categories
          Review Article

          metformin.,medications,insulin,incretin,hyperglycaemia,glucose,diabetes,Classes

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