Glucosamine in osteoarthritis
Lucio C Rovati; Marliese Annefeld; Giampaolo Giacovelli; Karl Schmid; lvo SetnikarSir
on the use of glucosamine in osteoarthritis. Although we agree that further studies are needed, Adam’s commentary causes confusion and unjustified alarm. The guidelines of the Osteoarthritis Research Society
have abandoned the term “slow-acting drugs”and now suggest classifying drugs as “symptom modifying” or “structure modifying”, depending on their ability to relieve symptoms or to affect joint structural changes, or both. Trials for symptom modification can be as short as 4 weeks, so the short term studies with glucosamine sulphate that Adams cites meet that requirement
. Longer studies have been presented at scientific meetings and submitted for publication.
(wrongly interpreted by Adams). We have shown that glucose metabolism is not impaired by short-term glucosamine. Fasting plasma glucose levels were not modified in the patient population over a 4-week treatment with glucosamine sulphate or placebo
nor were they in the small subset of patients who could possibly be defined as diabetic (plasma glucose at enrolment greater than 7 mmol/L), in whom mean plasma glucose concentrations fell both in the nine patients on glucosamine and the 14 given placebo. Furthermore, in a large, 3-year, placebo-controlled study of osteoarthritis in collaboration with J Y Reginster (Liège, Belgium)
we again observed only a tendency for fasting blood glucose to decrease with glucosamine (n=69), whereas it remained stable in those on placebo (n=70). Few diabetic patients took part in the long-term study, but when patients with high baseline glucose concentrations were analysed separately there was a tendency for similar results with a fall in plasma glucose in those taking glucosamine.
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