Voglibose (INN and USAN, trade name Voglib, marketed by Mascot Health Series) is an alpha-glucosidase inhibitor used for lowering postprandial blood glucose levels in people with diabetes mellitus.[1] Voglibose is a research product of Takeda Pharmaceutical Company, Japan's largest pharmaceutical company. Vogilbose was discovered in 1981, and was first launched in Japan in 1994,[2] under the trade name BASEN, to improve postprandial hyperglycemia in diabetes mellitus.[3]
Postprandialhyperglycemia (PPHG) is primarily due to first phase insulin secretion. Alpha glucosidase inhibitors delay glucose absorption at the intestine level and thereby prevent sudden surge of glucose after a meal.[2]
There are three major drugs which belong to this class, acarbose, miglitol and voglibose,[2] of which voglibose is the newest.
^Chen X, Zheng Y, Shen Y (2006). "Voglibose (Basen, AO-128), one of the most important alpha-glucosidase inhibitors". Current Medicinal Chemistry. 13 (1): 109–116. doi:10.2174/092986706789803035. PMID16457643.
Miller CK (2004). "New therapeutic options in the treatment of diabetes mellitus". In Greenstein B (ed.). Clinical Pharmacology for nurses (17th ed.). Elsevier Limited, Churchill Livingstone.