Since this drug seems to be focused on diabetics, I wonder if it is an immunosuppressant? I say this because some interesting research has demonstrated the presence of antibodies in a subset of diabetes to nephrin, a protein found in the lining of capillaries, in the beta cells of the pancreas, and in the kidneys. The hypothesis advanced by some authors is that 1) since the three sites in the body where this protein are found also correspond to three sites of the body targeted by diabetic complications; and 2) since the nephrin antibodies are found in 30% of type 1 diabetics tested, which is about the same percentage of type 1 diabetics who go on to suffer renal failure; and 3) since the autoimmune process causing type 1 diabetes is known to continue throughout the lifetime of the patient; and 4) since it is common for autoimmune diseases (such as lupus, Henoch-Schoenlein purpura, Wegener's vasculitis, Goodpasture Syndrome, etc.) to attack several organs, not just one as diabetes has long been assumed to do, we can hypothesize that it is this antibody to nephrin, which plays a vital role in renal health, which is in fact causing diabetic renal failure, and not hyperglycemia per se. The fact that diabetics seldom develop renal failure more than 20 years after onset of diabetes if they have not already developed it by then, no matter how high their blood sugars go, reinforces this suspicion that a slow autoimmune process is operative here, not hyperglycemia.