Dr. Laurel Habel, a senior researcher at Kaiser Permanente, presented similar findings of no increased cancer risk from glargine exposure. Her study was based on Kaiser’s northern and southern California claims and coding databases. The study group comprised 115,000 patients with diabetes – 100,000 took NPH insulin, 27,000 took glargine, and 12,000 took both. The median follow-up time was 2.3 years for glargine and 3.6 years for NPH.
"We found no evidence of increased prostate or colorectal cancer for glargine users, whether they were new users or whether they had switched to it," she said.
In a time exposure analysis of breast cancer risk, those who had been on glargine at baseline had a "suggestion of a very modest increase in risk, of 1.6." after 24 months. Curiously, she said, there was no risk increase for patients who had been on glargine for at least 2 years after switching from another insulin.
"We can’t think of any biological reason why we would only see this in the new users, so it might be a case of confounding," she said. "None of our results support this hypothesis that short-term use of glargine is associated with any form of cancer."
For prostate and colorectal cancers, there were no significant associations in any of the analyses, or in the time-dependent comparisons
Dr. Til Stürmer of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill presented the smallest study, but had results entirely consistent with those of his colleagues. Again, the comparison group of 52,553 patients was drawn from a large healthcare database. Median follow-up was 1.5 years for both the glargine and other insulin groups.
In looking at the relative risks of breast, prostate, colon. and all cancer, Dr. Stürmer found no significant associations with either new glargine users or those who switched medications. Compared with other insulins, glargine had a relative risk of 1.1 for breast cancer, 1.2 for prostate cancer, 0.9 for colon cancer, and 1.1 for all forms of cancer.
"In a subgroup looking at breast cancer stratified by time [0-6 months, 6-12 months, 12-24 months and longer than 24 months] the hazard ratios jumped around the null, but we only had 14 cancers in 4,000 person/years," he added.
All of the registry studies received support from Sanofi. Other than this funding, none of the presenters had any financial declarations relevant to their studies.