Durability of effects of exenatide treatment on glycemic control, body weight, systolic blood pressure, C-reactive protein, and triglyceride concentrations.
Endocr Pract · 2011
Last updated 2026-05-28In a study of 141 people with type 2 diabetes, taking exenatide for an average of 1.4 years lowered blood sugar control by 0.7%, weight by 5 kg, systolic blood pressure by 8 mm Hg, and triglycerides by 46 mg/dL. Among 61 patients who took exenatide for an average of 2.4 years, the drug reduced weight by 7 kg, blood pressure by 8 mm Hg, triglycerides by 52 mg/dL, blood sugar control by 1.3%, and CRP (a marker of inflammation) by 2.4 mg/L. Benefits were lost within 6 months after stopping the medication.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Endocr Pract, 2011 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 32 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.96 |
| NIH percentile | 49 |
| Molecules | exenatide |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes, Obesity, Cardiovascular Risk Reduction |
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine (1) whether long-term treatment with exenatide is associated with reductions in C-reactive protein (CRP), systolic blood pressure (BP), and triglyceride concentrations in addition to reductions in body weight and hemoglobin A(₁c) (A1C) levels and (2) whether these beneficial results persist without any loss of effect while exenatide is being used, and whether they reverse after its cessation.
METHODS: We conducted a retrospective review of 141 patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus treated with exenatide at a tertiary clinic.
RESULTS: Exenatide (mean duration of treatment, 1.4 years) decreased A1C (0.7%), weight (5 kg), systolic BP (8 mm Hg), and triglyceride concentrations (46 mg/dL) (P<.05 for all). Sixty-one patients continued exenatide therapy throughout the study (mean duration of use, 2.4 years). Exenatide treatment reduced their mean weight by 7 kg, systolic BP by 8 mm Hg, triglycerides by 52 mg/dL, A1C by 1.3%, and CRP by 2.4 mg/L (P<.05 for all). Reductions in systolic BP and CRP were not related to weight loss. The reduction in CRP concentration was significantly related to the baseline CRP concentration (r = 0.78; P<.001) and to change in A1C (r = 0.68; P = .02). Patients who stopped taking exenatide had a reversal of the benefits within 6 months after cessation of treatment.
CONCLUSION: Exenatide treatment in patients with type 2 diabetes has durable and persistent beneficial effects on A1C, weight, CRP, systolic BP, and triglyceride concentrations. Cessation of treatment reverses all these beneficial effects within 6 months. There was no evidence of loss of its effects while exenatide treatment was continued.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 20841306 ↗
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