RESUMO
Background: Rebound hyperglycemia may occur following glucagon treatment for severe hypoglycemia. We assessed rebound hyperglycemia occurrence after nasal glucagon (NG) or injectable glucagon (IG) administration in patients with type 1 diabetes (T1D) and type 2 diabetes (T2D). Methods: This was a pooled analysis of 3 multicenter, randomized, open-label studies (NCT03339453, NCT03421379, NCT01994746) in patients ≥18 years with T1D or T2D with induced hypoglycemia. Proportions of patients achieving treatment success [blood glucose (BG) increase to ≥70â mg/dL or increase of ≥20â mg/dL from nadir within 15 and 30â minutes]; BG ≥70â mg/dL within 15â minutes; in-range BG (70-180â mg/dL) 1 to 2 and 1 to 4â hours postdose; and BG >180â mg/dL 1 to 2 and 1 to 4â hours postdose were compared. Incremental area under curve (iAUC) of BG >180â mg/dL and area under curve (AUC) of observed BG values postdose were analyzed. Safety was assessed in all studies. Results: Higher proportions of patients had in-range BG with NG vs IG (1-2â hours: P = .0047; 1-4â hours: P = .0034). Lower proportions of patients had at least 1 BG value >180â mg/dL with NG vs IG (1-2â hours: P = .0034; 1-4â hours: P = .0068). iAUC and AUC were lower with NG vs IG (P = .025 and P < .0001). As expected, similar proportions of patients receiving NG or IG achieved treatment success at 15 and 30â minutes (97-100%). Most patients had BG ≥70â mg/dL within 15â minutes (93-96%). The safety profile was consistent with previous studies. Conclusion: This study demonstrated lower rebound hyperglycemia risk after NG treatment compared with IG. Clinical Trial Registration: NCT03421379, NCT03339453, NCT01994746.