Liraglutide as additional treatment for type 1 diabetes.
Eur J Endocrinol · 2011
Last updated 2026-05-28In a study of 14 people with well-controlled type 1 diabetes, adding liraglutide to insulin for one week reduced average fasting blood sugar from 130 to 110 mg/dl and average weekly blood sugar from 137.5 to 115 mg/dl. Blood sugar swings also decreased, and insulin doses were lowered. Among the 8 patients who continued liraglutide for 24 weeks, these improvements persisted, HbA1c dropped from 6.5% to 6.1%, and body weight fell by about 4.5 kg.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Eur J Endocrinol, 2011 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 105 |
| Relative citation ratio | 3.07 |
| NIH percentile | 84 |
| Molecules | liraglutide |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether the addition of liraglutide to insulin to treat patients with type 1 diabetes leads to an improvement in glycemic control and diminish glycemic variability.
SUBJECTS AND METHODS: In this study, 14 patients with well-controlled type 1 diabetes on continuous glucose monitoring and intensive insulin therapy were treated with liraglutide for 1 week. Of the 14 patients, eight continued therapy for 24 weeks.
RESULTS: In all the 14 patients, mean fasting and mean weekly glucose concentrations significantly decreased after 1 week from 130±10 to 110±8 mg/dl (P<0.01) and from 137.5±20 to 115±12 mg/dl (P<0.01) respectively. Glycemic excursions significantly improved at 1 week. The mean s.d. of glucose concentrations decreased from 56±10 to 26±6 mg/dl (P<0.01) and the coefficient of variation decreased from 39.6±10 to 22.6±7 (P<0.01). There was a concomitant fall in the basal insulin from 24.5±6 to 16.5±6 units (P<0.01) and bolus insulin from 22.5±4 to 15.5±4 units (P<0.01). In patients who continued therapy with liraglutide for 24 weeks, mean fasting, mean weekly glucose concentrations, glycemic excursions, and basal and bolus insulin dose also significantly decreased (P<0.01). HbA1c decreased significantly at 24 weeks from 6.5 to 6.1% (P=0.02), as did the body weight by 4.5±1.5 kg (P=0.02).
CONCLUSION: Liraglutide treatment provides an additional strategy for improving glycemic control in type 1 diabetes. It also leads to weight loss.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 21646283 ↗
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