Insulin Aspart
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Insulin aspart
NovoLog, Fiasp (ultra-rapid), Trurapi
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Summary
Pharmacy
Starting dose
SC 4-6 units (or 1 unit per 10-15 g carbs) at meals; titrate to postprandial glucose
Preparations
100 U/mL (NovoLog, Fiasp) vials, pens, cartridges
US FDA Max
Titrated to glucose; no fixed maximum
Pharmacology
Routes
Subcutaneous, IV, insulin pumps
Onset
SC: 5-15 minutes (Fiasp 2.5 minutes earlier on average)
Duration
3-5 hours
Half-life
~80 minutes SC[1]
Bioavailability
~100% from subcutaneous depot
Pregnancy
Insulin is the preferred glucose-lowering therapy in pregnancy; aspart is widely used.[citation needed]
Legal status
Rx-only in US
Purported mechanism
Insulin aspart is a recombinant human insulin analog with B28-Pro replaced by aspartate; the substitution reduces hexamer stability, so injected insulin dissociates to monomer rapidly and absorbs in time for a meal-timed dose.0 Binds the same insulin receptor as endogenous insulin with comparable mitogenic-to-metabolic ratio. Fiasp formulation adds niacinamide and L-arginine to accelerate the initial absorption phase further, allowing dosing at meal start (or up to 20 minutes after)[1].
References
[edit | edit source]- ↑ 1.0 1.1 FDA Prescribing Information, NovoLog (insulin aspart), Novo Nordisk, current revision. https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2019/020986s085lbl.pdf