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Psychological and quality of life changes in patients using GLP-1 analogues.

J Diabetes Complications · 2011

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a 6-month study of 71 people with type 2 diabetes starting the GLP-1 drug exenatide and 67 starting insulin, those on exenatide reported higher treatment satisfaction, better overall well-being, and lower anxiety and depression scores. These psychological benefits occurred even after accounting for changes in weight and blood sugar control.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalJ Diabetes Complications, 2011
Citations62
Relative citation ratio1.95
NIH percentile73
Molecules
Conditions studied Depression, Anxiety

Abstract

AIMS: Using psychological and quality of life assessment tools, we prospectively studied changes in health-related quality of life and emotional well-being in patients who had commenced GLP-1 analogue therapy (exenatide) and compared them with new insulin starters. METHODS: Two matched groups of patients with type 2 diabetes who had suboptimal glycaemic control on oral medication were assessed using a battery of well-validated psychological and quality of life tests at baseline, prior to commencement of treatment and then again after 6 months of continuous therapy, along with body mass index (BMI) and hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) measurements. RESULTS: In the exenatide-treated patient group (n=71), treatment satisfaction was greater (P<.05), as was the well-being score, at 6 months (P<.05), and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale scores were significantly reduced (P<.05) when compared with the insulin-treated group (n=67). This was also found to be independent of changes in BMI in an analysis of covariance calculation. The effect size (using Cohen's d) of these changes was however relatively small. CONCLUSIONS: Although exenatide and insulin appear to have similar efficacy for the treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus, there are several differences between them that could influence outcomes from a patient's perspective. Exenatide affects both physiological and psychological parameters. 'Well-being' generally tends to improve in exenatide-treated patients and could be used as an adjunctive therapy for depression in the context of diabetes. A larger study is required to confirm these interesting findings.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 21601480 ↗