nonbiguanide
Nonbiguanide is a term used in pharmacology to describe substances that do not belong to the biguanide class. In the context of diabetes management, biguanides refer primarily to metformin and related compounds that share the biguanide chemical structure. Nonbiguanide refers to all other glucose-lowering therapies that are not biguanides. The term is not a formal pharmacological subclass; rather, it is used to contrast metformin-based therapy with other drug classes.
Nonbiguanide therapies include insulin and non-insulin agents such as sulfonylureas (glipizide, glyburide), meglitinides (repaglinide), thiazolidinediones (pioglitazone),
Terminology note: "nonbiguanide" is descriptive rather than prescriptive and may be used in literature to distinguish
History: Biguanides emerged in the early 20th century; metformin became the prototypical drug in this class,