Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: EMPAGLIFLOZIN LINAGLIPTIN versus JENTADUETO.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: EMPAGLIFLOZIN LINAGLIPTIN versus JENTADUETO.
EMPAGLIFLOZIN; LINAGLIPTIN vs JENTADUETO
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Empagliflozin is a sodium-glucose co-transporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitor that reduces renal glucose reabsorption, increasing urinary glucose excretion. Linagliptin is a dipeptidyl peptidase 4 (DPP-4) inhibitor that prolongs the activity of incretin hormones (GLP-1, GIP), enhancing glucose-dependent insulin secretion and suppressing glucagon release.
Jentadueto is a combination of linagliptin and metformin. Linagliptin inhibits DPP-4, increasing incretin levels (GLP-1, GIP) and enhancing glucose-dependent insulin secretion while suppressing glucagon. Metformin decreases hepatic glucose production, reduces intestinal glucose absorption, and improves insulin sensitivity.
10 mg empagliflozin/5 mg linagliptin orally once daily.
Administered orally twice daily with meals. Initial dose: one tablet JENTADUETO 5 mg/500 mg or 5 mg/1000 mg; subsequent titration based on glycemic response. Maximum daily dose: linagliptin 5 mg, metformin 2000 mg.
None Documented
None Documented
Empagliflozin: ~12.4 h (supports once-daily dosing). Linagliptin: ~12 h (terminal half-life; long binding to DPP-4 allows once-daily dosing despite short half-life).
Linagliptin: terminal t1/2 ~12 hours (long binding to DPP-4). Metformin: terminal t1/2 ~6.2 hours (renal impairment prolongs).
Empagliflozin: ~54% renal (unchanged), ~41% fecal (primarily unchanged parent). Linagliptin: ~80% fecal (enterohepatic circulation), ~5% renal.
Renal: linagliptin ~5% unchanged; metformin ~90% unchanged. Fecal: linagliptin ~80% (mostly unchanged). Biliary: minimal.
Category A/B
Category C
DPP-4 Inhibitor
DPP-4 Inhibitor / Biguanide Combination