Efficacy and safety of the once-daily GLP-1 receptor agonist lixisenatide in monotherapy: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial in patients with type 2 diabetes (GetGoal-Mono).
Diabetes Care · 2012
Last updated 2026-05-28In a 12-week study of 361 people with type 2 diabetes not taking other glucose-lowering drugs, those who took once-daily lixisenatide saw their blood sugar control improve by about 0.54% to 0.66% more than those who took a placebo. About half of the lixisenatide users reached a blood sugar target of less than 7.0%, compared to about a quarter of the placebo group. Nausea was the most common side effect, reported by 23% of lixisenatide users versus 4.1% of placebo users.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Diabetes Care, 2012 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 178 |
| Relative citation ratio | 5.53 |
| NIH percentile | 93 |
| Molecules | lixisenatide |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess efficacy and safety of lixisenatide monotherapy in type 2 diabetes.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Randomized, double-blind, 12-week study of 361 patients not on glucose-lowering therapy (HbA(1c) 7-10%) allocated to one of four once-daily subcutaneous dose increase regimens: lixisenatide 2-step (10 μg for 1 week, 15 μg for 1 week, and then 20 μg; n = 120), lixisenatide 1-step (10 μg for 2 weeks and then 20 μg; n = 119), placebo 2-step (n = 61), or placebo 1-step (n = 61) (placebo groups were combined for analyses). Primary end point was HbA(1c) change from baseline to week 12.
RESULTS: Once-daily lixisenatide significantly improved HbA(1c) (mean baseline 8.0%) in both groups (least squares mean change vs. placebo: -0.54% for 2-step, -0.66% for 1-step; P < 0.0001). Significantly more lixisenatide patients achieved HbA(1c) <7.0% (52.2% 2-step, 46.5% 1-step) and ≤ 6.5% (31.9% 2-step, 25.4% 1-step) versus placebo (26.8% and 12.5%, respectively; P < 0.01). Lixisenatide led to marked significant improvements of 2-h postprandial glucose levels and blood glucose excursions measured during a standardized breakfast test. A significant decrease in fasting plasma glucose was observed in both lixisenatide groups versus placebo. Mean decreases in body weight (∼2 kg) were observed in all groups. The most common adverse events were gastrointestinal-nausea was the most frequent (lixisenatide 23% overall, placebo 4.1%). Symptomatic hypoglycemia occurred in 1.7% of lixisenatide and 1.6% of placebo patients, with no severe episodes. Safety/tolerability was similar for the two dose regimens.
CONCLUSIONS: Once-daily lixisenatide monotherapy significantly improved glycemic control with a pronounced postprandial effect (75% reduction in glucose excursion) and was safe and well tolerated in type 2 diabetes.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 22432104 ↗
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