Metformin is a cheap, orally administered, guideline recommended glucose-lowering drug (GLD), initiated as monotherapy in treatment naïve newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes (T2D), and in combination with other GLDs in T2D not controlled on metformin. The unique Asian T2D phenotype that is markedly different than Western population, and warrants T2D treatment approaches unique to the Asian population. However, the bulk of metformin literature is from Western population and may not be generalizable for Asians. The systematic review evaluated the efficacy and safety of metformin monotherapy and combination therapy in Asians. Literature on other GLDs recommended by the 2023 American Diabetes Association guidelines as add-on therapy to metformin were included from Asia. The systematic review concluded that metformin is effective and safe for long-term T2D control of T2D in Asians. Metformin monotherapy may be initiated and continued in treatment naïve Asian patients with T2D and/or obesity if the monotherapy is adequate for achieving glycemic control. Other GLDs may be added for better glycemic control for those who fail on monotherapy. Patients inadequately controlled on another first-line GLD can achieve glycemic control and target HbA1c of <7% by adding metformin in a once daily dose. The use of metformin reduces the risk of hypoglycemia, and its gastrointestinal side effects are mild and manageable in Asians.
* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.