Jentadueto is a combination oral antidiabetic medication used in the management of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM)
| Component |
Generic Names |
Pharmacologic Class |
| Linagliptin |
Dipeptidyl Peptidase-4 (DPP-4) inhibitor |
Incretin enhancer |
| Metformin hydrochloride |
Biguanide |
Insulin sensitizer |
Mechanism of Action
1. Linagliptin (DPP-4 inhibitor)
- Inhibits the DPP-4 enzyme, which normally degrades incretin hormones (GLP-1 and GIP).
- Increased incretin levels → enhanced glucose-dependent insulin secretion and reduced glucagon secretion → lower fasting and postprandial glucose.
- Has minimal risk of hypoglycemia and is weight-neutral.
- Unlike other DPP-4 inhibitors (e.g., sitagliptin), linagliptin does not require renal dose adjustment because it’s primarily excreted via the bile and gut.
- Decreases hepatic glucose production (inhibits gluconeogenesis).
- Increases insulin sensitivity and peripheral glucose uptake.
- Decreases intestinal glucose absorption.
- Promotes mild weight loss and does not cause hypoglycemia (when used alone).
Indication
- Adjunct to diet and exercise to improve glycemic control in adults with type 2 diabetes mellitus.
- May be used as initial therapy in patients inadequately controlled with diet/exercise alone, or as step-up therapy when monotherapy with metformin or linagliptin is insufficient.
Available Strengths (U.S. & Canada)
| Linagliptin / Metformin HCl (mg) |
Tablet |
| 2.5 mg / 500 mg |
Film-coated tablet |
| 2.5 mg / 850 mg |
Film-coated tablet |
| 2.5 mg / 1000 mg |
Film-coated tablet |
Usual Adult Dose
- Initial: 1 tablet twice daily with meals (based on patient’s current metformin dose).
- Max dose: 5 mg linagliptin / 2000 mg metformin per day (i.e., 2.5/1000 mg twice daily).
- Adjust according to tolerability and renal function.
Renal Dose Adjustment
- Linagliptin: No adjustment needed.
- Metformin:
- eGFR ≥ 60 mL/min: No adjustment.
- eGFR 45–59: Continue with caution; monitor renal function q3–6 months.
- eGFR 30–44: Reduce dose by 50%; avoid initiation.
- eGFR < 30: Contraindicated (risk of lactic acidosis).
Contraindications
- eGFR < 30 mL/min/1.73 m²
- Acute or chronic metabolic acidosis (including lactic acidosis)
- Hypersensitivity to linagliptin, metformin, or any component of the product
Major Adverse Effects
| Component |
Common Effects |
Serious / Rare Effects |
| Linagliptin |
Nasopharyngitis, cough, arthralgia |
Pancreatitis, hypersensitivity reactions, bullous pemphigoid |
| Metformin |
GI upset (nausea, diarrhea, abdominal discomfort), metallic taste |
Lactic acidosis (rare but serious, esp. in renal/hepatic impairment), vitamin B12 deficiency with long-term use |
Drug Interactions
- Linagliptin: minimal CYP interactions; may increase risk of hypoglycemia if combined with insulin or sulfonylureas.
- Metformin: interactions with cationic drugs eliminated by renal tubular secretion (e.g., cimetidine), contrast media (risk of lactic acidosis).
- Temporarily discontinue before iodinated contrast imaging and restart after renal function reassessment (48 hours).
Monitoring Parameters (Clinical Pharmacist Focus)
| Parameter |
Frequency |
Notes |
| HbA1c |
Every 3 months |
Assess long-term glycemic control |
| Fasting & postprandial glucose |
Ongoing |
Dose titration and daily control |
| Renal function (eGFR) |
Baseline, then annually (q3–6 mo if borderline) |
Adjust metformin if eGFR <45 |
| Hepatic function |
Periodically |
Metformin contraindicated in hepatic failure |
| Vitamin B12 |
Every 2–3 years |
Risk of deficiency with long-term metformin use |
| GI tolerance |
Ongoing |
Gradual dose titration reduces side effects |
Clinical Pearls
- Advantages: Convenient single tablet, complementary mechanisms, low risk of hypoglycemia, weight neutral.
- Counseling: Take with meals to reduce GI side effects.
- Storage: Room temperature; protect from moisture.
- Trade Name: Jentadueto®
- Manufacturer: Boehringer Ingelheim / Eli Lilly