Sequential intensification of metformin treatment in type 2 diabetes with liraglutide followed by randomized addition of basal insulin prompted by A1C targets.
Diabetes Care · 2012
Last updated 2026-05-28In a study of 988 people with type 2 diabetes, adding the drug liraglutide to metformin for 12 weeks helped 61% of participants reach blood sugar control (A1C below 7%), while 39% did not. Those who still had high blood sugar were then split into two groups: one added insulin detemir, which further lowered A1C by 0.5% over 26 weeks, while the other group saw no improvement. Weight loss was observed throughout, and very few participants experienced low blood sugar.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Diabetes Care, 2012 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 130 |
| Relative citation ratio | 3.96 |
| NIH percentile | 89 |
| Molecules | liraglutide |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: We evaluated the addition of liraglutide to metformin in type 2 diabetes followed by intensification with basal insulin (detemir) if glycated hemoglobin (A1C) ≥7%.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: In 988 participants from North America and Europe uncontrolled on metformin ± sulfonylurea, sulfonylurea was discontinued and liraglutide 1.8 mg/day added for 12 weeks (run-in). Subsequently, those with A1C ≥7% were randomized 1:1 to 26 weeks' open-label addition of insulin detemir to metformin + liraglutide (n = 162) or continuation without insulin detemir (n = 161). Patients achieving A1C <7% continued unchanged treatment (observational arm). The primary end point was A1C change between randomized groups.
RESULTS: Of 821 participants completing the run-in, 61% (n = 498) achieved A1C <7% (mean change -1.3% from 7.7% at start), whereas 39% (n = 323) did not (-0.6% from 8.3% at start). During run-in, 167 of 988 (17%) withdrew; 46% of these due to gastrointestinal adverse events. At week 26, A1C decreased further, by 0.5% (from 7.6% at randomization) with insulin detemir (n = 162) versus 0.02% increase without insulin detemir (n = 157) to 7.1 and 7.5%, respectively (estimated treatment difference -0.52 [95% CI -0.68 to -0.36]; P < 0.0001). Forty-three percent of participants with insulin detemir versus 17% without reached A1C <7%. Mean weight decreased by 3.5 kg during run-in, then by 0.16 kg with insulin detemir or 0.95 kg without insulin detemir. In the randomized phase, no major hypoglycemia occurred and minor hypoglycemia rates were 0.286 and 0.029 events per participant-year with and without insulin detemir (9.2 vs. 1.3%).
CONCLUSIONS: Supplementation of metformin with liraglutide and then insulin detemir was well tolerated in the majority of patients, with good glycemic control, sustained weight loss, and very low hypoglycemia rates.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 22584132 ↗
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