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The design of the liraglutide clinical trial programme.

Diabetes Obes Metab · 2012

Last updated 2026-05-28

Liraglutide is a once-daily medication for type 2 diabetes that was tested in multiple large, multinational trials involving thousands of participants. These studies compared liraglutide to other diabetes drugs like metformin, insulin glargine, and sitagliptin to evaluate its effectiveness and safety across different stages of diabetes treatment.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalDiabetes Obes Metab, 2012
Citations12
Relative citation ratio0.36
NIH percentile22
Molecules liraglutide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes, Obesity, Cardiovascular Risk Reduction

Abstract

Liraglutide is a once-daily human glucagon-like peptide-1 analogue used in the treatment of type 2 diabetes (T2D). It has been prospectively investigated in a series of multinational, randomised, controlled phase 3 trials (the Liraglutide Effect and Action in Diabetes programme), as well as in an additional direct head-to-head study with sitagliptin. These trials were designed to clarify the use and safety of liraglutide in clinical practice across the treatment continuum of T2D, and consequently involved a large number and diverse range of patients. These studies also included active comparisons against antidiabetic agents including metformin, rosiglitazone, glimepiride, insulin glargine, exenatide and sitagliptin, and therefore have helped to examine clinical differences and similarities between liraglutide and these commonly used agents.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 22405264 ↗

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