GLPwatch

Relative risk of acute pancreatitis in initiators of exenatide twice daily compared with other anti-diabetic medication: a follow-up study.

Diabet Med · 2012

Last updated 2026-05-28

A study of 482,034 people starting diabetes medications found that those who began taking exenatide twice daily did not have a higher risk of developing acute pancreatitis compared to those who started other diabetes drugs. The odds ratio was 0.95, meaning the risk was similar between the two groups. No increased risk was found in any category of exenatide use, whether current, recent, or past.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalDiabet Med, 2012
Citations69
Relative citation ratio2.28
NIH percentile77
Molecules exenatide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

AIMS: Previously, a retrospective cohort study found no increased risk of acute pancreatitis with current or recent use of exenatide twice daily compared with use of other anti-diabetic drugs. This follow-up study investigated incident acute pancreatitis, with the use of a different data source and analytic method, in patients exposed to exenatide twice daily compared with patients exposed to other anti-diabetic medications. METHODS: A large US health insurance claims database was used. Eligible patients had ≥ 9 months continuous enrollment without a claim for pancreatitis and a claim for a new anti-diabetic medication on or after 1 June 2005 to 31 March 2009. Cases of acute pancreatitis were defined as hospitalized patients with an Internation Classification of Disease 9 code of 577.0 in the primary position. A discrete time survival model was used to evaluate the relationship between exenatide twice daily and acute pancreatitis. RESULTS: Of 482,034 eligible patients, 24,237 initiated exenatide twice daily and 457,797 initiated another anti-diabetic medication. Initiators of exenatide twice daily had more severe diabetes compared with initiators of other anti-diabetic medications. After adjustments for propensity score, insulin and use of medication potentially associated with acute pancreatitis, the odds ratio with exenatide twice daily exposure was 0.95 (95% CI 0.65-1.38). A secondary analysis that examined current, recent and past medication exposure found no increased risk of acute pancreatitis with exenatide twice daily, regardless of exposure category. CONCLUSION: This study indicates that exposure to exenatide twice daily was not associated with an increased risk of acute pancreatitis compared with exposure to other anti-diabetic medications. These results should be interpreted in light of potential residual confounding and unknown biases.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 22416857 ↗

Related research