From an initial cohort of 170,000 patients (randomly selected by the data vendor from those meeting the initial selection criteria), some 85,200 individual patients met the criteria for at least one cohort. This was further reduced to 62,809 patients by selecting only those who achieved cohort membership after the year 2000 (Table 1). Membership of the individual cohorts was as follows: 31,421 (50%) patients treated with metformin monotherapy; 7,439 (12%) patients with sulfonylurea monotherapy; 13,882 (22%) patients with combination therapy with metformin plus sulfonylureas, and 10,067 (16%) patients treated with an insulin-based regimen. Among the insulin-treated patients, 44% were also represented in the combination therapy cohort. Within the combination therapy cohort, 23% were also represented in the monotherapy cohorts. Total follow-up time was 152,065 person-years; 17,553 person-years in the sulfonylurea group, the least numerous cohort (Table 1).
Table 1 Baseline characteristics for the four main treatment cohorts
Baseline characteristics by the four general cohorts
The common pattern of type 2 diabetes treatment progression and intensification in the UK was reflected in the baseline characteristics of the four respective treatment cohorts. People initiated on metformin monotherapy were, on average, youngest (59 years old) (Table 1). Those initiated on OHA combination therapy and insulin-based therapies, on average, were of similar age (64 years), whereas those initiated with sulfonylureas were older (70 years). The duration of diabetes varied in accordance with this pattern: the mean was 2.9 (median 1.7) years overall, and 1.5 (0.4), 1.9 (1.5), 4.4 (3.8) and 6.2 (5.8) years for metformin monotherapy, sulfonylurea monotherapy, OHA combination therapy and insulin-based therapies, respectively. These observations illustrate that there were, understandably, considerable differences between the four general cohorts. A detailed comparison of the baseline characteristics of the four general treatment cohorts is listed in Table 1. Features of note that may have affected this study included increased smoking incidence in insulin-treated patients; 70% had ever smoked as against 66% for the group as a whole. People who started sulfonylurea monotherapy were lighter; the average weight in this cohort was 80 kg for men and 68 kg for women, compared with 92 and 82 kg, respectively, for the group as a whole. The crude prevalence of prior solid tumour cancers also differed by cohort at baseline, varying from 4.3% in patients treated with metformin monotherapy, to 7.6% those who received sulfonylurea monotherapy.
Baseline characteristics by insulin-treatment subcohorts
The 8,034 people representing the four selected insulin subcohorts (Cohorts 4a to 4d), accounted for 80% of the 10,067 patients with newly initiated insulin-based regimens (Tables 1 and 2). The reasons for starting a particular insulin regimen in patients with type 2 diabetes are not clear.
Table 2 Baseline characteristics for the insulin regimen subcohorts
Although less obvious than the differences observed between the four main cohorts above, there were systematic differences between those starting the four insulin regimens. For example, people initiated with analogue biphasic insulin were, on average, younger (62 years old) than people initiated with human biphasic insulin (66 years old) (Table 2; p < 0.001). The average age of both Cohort 4a (insulin glargine alone) and Cohort 4b (human basal insulin alone) was 65 years. Thus, Cox proportional hazards models were necessary to adjust for these systematic differences.
Risk of progression to all solid tumour cancers
Across all patients, 2,106 people progressed to a record of a first solid tumour cancer (1.1% annual incidence). The crude incidence of solid tumour cancer in only those people who had no prior solid tumour cancer was 0.9%, 1.6%, 1.1% and 1.3% per year for Cohorts 1 to 4, respectively. The unadjusted rate of progression to solid tumour cancer for the four general cohorts is illustrated in the Kaplan–Meier curve in Fig. 1. The pattern of unadjusted risk at a gross level appeared to reflect the systematic differences in the baseline characteristics, whereby the younger metformin monotherapy-treated patients had the lowest cancer incidence, and the older sulfonylurea monotherapy-treated patients had the highest. Following adjustment for confounding factors, the pattern of unadjusted risk altered to present an alternative, distinct pattern (Table 3, Fig. 1). Whilst metformin monotherapy still had the lowest risk, the insulin-based regimens then had the highest risk of progression to solid tumour cancer (HR 1.42, CI 1.27–1.60). The adjusted HR of a solid tumour cancer for those starting sulfonylurea monotherapy was 1.36 (95% CI 1.19–1.54), and for OHA combination therapy was 1.08 (95% CI 0.96–1.21). In the same Cox proportional hazards model (Table 3), the HR of solid tumour cancer in those who had smoked vs those who had never smoked was 1.35 (95% CI 1.22–1.49). The inclusion or exclusion of prior solid tumour cancers had little impact on these findings; for example, the HR for insulin-based regimens vs metformin monotherapy decreased slightly to 1.35 (95% CI 1.19–1.54) following exclusion of patients with prior solid tumour cancers.
Table 3 Cox proportional hazards model for progression to solid tumour cancers in people treated with metformin monotherapy, sulfonylurea monotherapy, combination therapy (metformin plus sulfonylureas) and insulin-based therapies (Cohorts 1 to 4, respectively)
The specific insulin regimens did not differ with regard to progression to all solid tumour cancers (Table 4). It was possible to introduce the covariate ‘concomitant metformin at any time during insulin exposure’ into this model. Metformin use was associated with lower risk of cancer in these insulin-treated patients (HR 0.54, 95% CI 0.43–0.66; Table 4).
Table 4 Cox proportional hazards model for progression to all solid tumours in people treated with alternative insulin regimens
Risk of progression to breast, colorectal, pancreatic or prostate cancer
The results for each of the four cancers considered individually were largely similar to those for all solid tumour cancers in terms of the order of the cohorts by risk (Table 5). With regard to the combined risk of progression to breast or colorectal or prostate cancer, compared with metformin monotherapy, the HRs for sulfonylurea monotherapy, oral combination therapy and insulin-based therapies were 1.62 (95% CI 1.30–2.01), 1.07 (95% CI 0.87–1.31) and 1.55 (95% CI 1.27–1.89), respectively. No difference emerged for breast cancer alone or prostate cancer alone between the four main therapy classes (Table 5, Fig. 2), but large differences were seen for colorectal cancer alone and pancreatic cancer alone. The HR for insulin treatment relative to metformin monotherapy was 1.69 (95% CI 1.23–2.33) for colorectal cancer, and 4.63 (95% CI 2.64–8.10; Table 5) for pancreatic cancer.
Table 5 Cox proportional hazards model for progression to breast, colorectal, pancreatic or prostate cancer in people treated with different treatment regimens
The subgroup of insulin-based therapies was too small for individual consideration of each cancer. We therefore examined a combined endpoint of breast, colorectal and pancreatic cancer; no differences were seen between therapies (Table 6). Combined metformin and insulin therapy showed a trend to reduced risk of this combined endpoint (HR 0.73, 95% CI 0.51–1.04; Table 6). Analysis of glargine vs all other insulins as a single comparator group revealed no difference with respect to progression to breast cancer (HR 0.86, 95% CI 0.42–1.75; Table 7). The number of events in this comparison was ten in the glargine group vs 38 in the remaining insulin group.
Table 6 Cox proportional hazards model for progression to breast, colorectal or pancreatic cancer in people treated with alternative insulin regimens
Table 7 Cox proportional hazards model for progression to breast cancer in people treated with glargine vs all other insulin regimens
Risk of cancer vs patients with no exposure to diabetes medication
It was possible to identify 14,304 patients who met the inclusion criteria, with 39,683 person-years of follow-up. Their mean (SD) age at baseline was 56.6 (17.3) years; 46% were women, and 3.7% had prior cancer. Using the baseline Cox model, the adjusted risk of progression to a solid tumour cancer in this untreated cohort was the same as that for metformin (HR 0.90, 95% CI 0.79–1.03; Table 8, Fig. 1).
Table 8 Cox proportional hazards model for progression to all solid tumour cancers in those with no prior exposure to a diabetes-related medication vs Cohorts 1 to 4