Review of the therapeutic uses of liraglutide.
Clin Ther · 2011
Last updated 2026-05-28Liraglutide is a once-daily injection approved for treating type 2 diabetes that helps control blood sugar by increasing insulin release by 34% to 118% and lowering post-meal glucagon levels by 20%. In studies, it reduced blood sugar marker HbA1c by 0.84% to 1.5% when used alone or with other diabetes medications, but 7% to 40% of participants reported temporary nausea, and 2.5% experienced severe low blood sugar in one trial.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Clin Ther, 2011 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 25 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.83 |
| NIH percentile | 44 |
| Molecules | liraglutide |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes, Obesity, Cardiovascular Risk Reduction, Chronic Kidney Disease |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Glucagon-like peptide (GLP-1) is a neuroendocrine hormone that increases blood glucose and is a drug target for treatment of type 2 diabetes. Liraglutide, a subcutaneous, once-daily GLP-1 agonist, is approved for the treatment of type 2 diabetes in the United States and Europe. It also has been studied for weight loss.
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this article is to review all of the relevant literature on the chemistry, pharmacology, pharmacokinetics, metabolism, clinical trials, safety, drug interactions, cost, and place in therapy of liraglutide.
METHODS: Literature searches of MEDLINE between 1969 and September 2010, International Pharmaceutical Abstracts between 1970 and September 2010, American Diabetes Association Meeting abstracts (2008-2010), and European Association for the Study of Diabetes abstracts (2008-2010) were performed using liraglutide, Victoza, and NN2211 as key terms.
RESULTS: Thirteen randomized controlled trials were identified and summarized. Liraglutide has been shown to increase glucose-dependent insulin release by 34% to 118% and reduce postprandial glucagon levels by 20%. Studies showed that liraglutide, as monotherapy and in combination with glimepiride, metformin, and/or rosiglitazone, lowers glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA(1c)) between 0.84% and 1.5%. Transient nausea was reported by 7% to 40% of subjects. Severe hypoglycemia-glucose <55 mg/dL-was observed by 2.5% of subjects in 1 trial.
CONCLUSION: Liraglutide safely and effectively reduces HbA(1c) in patients with type 2 diabetes. The most recent American Diabetes Association guidelines recommended a GLP-1 agonist along with metformin as a second-tier therapy for type 2 diabetes. Although the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists/American College of Endocrinologists' guidelines recommended it for first-line monotherapy in patients with HbA(1c) between 6.5% and 7.5% and with metformin if HbA(1c) is between 7.6% and 8.5%, liraglutide should be considered for patients who cannot tolerate first-line agents or if an additional agent is needed to help reach target HbA(1c) goals.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 21741090 ↗
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