Hi Katherine
Overall, the increase with the glucose with more time being treated with the drug, BID dosing compared to what you experienced with QD dosing & the dosing of insulin being required to manage the glucose at this point is not abnormal/unusual at all. Keep in mind that the effects of Pred on glucose, if there is going to be an effect, increase with time exposed to the drug. As a result, it is not unusual to see less of an effect early on in treatment with respect to insulin resistance vs 2-3 months into treatment. Based on the data and the clinical symptoms being under control, I personally would be more inclined to attribute the rise in glucose levels you are seeing with 1) the increase in time she has now been treated with Pred and 2) the move to BID dosing of the Pred vs concluding that the inflammation is not being managed. Now, if 1) her symptoms were not being managed or only partially managed (not to say it is completely out of the realm of possibly that there may be some low level inflammation still existing), & 2) there was an increase in glucose & you had not started the drug recently & also moved to BID dosing, I would be more concerned that inflammation is a problem.
Again, it is not an official, large study in cats, but within the human literature, BID dosing resulted in increased glucose overall throughout the 24 hour period vs QD dosing, but again, lowered the level of the glucose of the peak or spike with the Pred after it was given. I experienced the same with T—-higher glucose after each dose vs a period of higher glucose in one cycle followed by a return to lower glucose and a need for less insulin for the 2nd half of the cycle. Despite the Pred having a biological effect long after you give it, there is at least a break for the body, to some extent, when it is given QD vs BID.
I am sure you will run it by your team who has worked with many cats with SCL/DM and have seen the glucose levels and they will have some thoughts as well

. One other thought/option you can try to test the whether the QD vs BID dosing is contributing to what you are seeing for Ruby is go back to QD dosing and see if the glucose returns to the pattern/lower glucose similar to where it was before. Keep in mind, it may still run a bit higher because of the amount of time that she has now been on the Pred vs during your previous QD dosing. I know this may be a challenge due to your work schedules, but I wanted to at least throw the idea out there as one trial and error/info gathering possibility.
Rubs to Ruby and Olive

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