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Exenatide extended-release: a review of its use in type 2 diabetes mellitus.

Drugs · 2012

Last updated 2026-05-28

Exenatide extended-release (ER), taken once weekly by injection, is approved in the US and Europe to help adults with type 2 diabetes improve blood sugar control when diet and exercise alone or with other diabetes medications aren’t enough. In studies lasting 24 to 30 weeks, exenatide ER significantly improved blood sugar control, body weight, and some heart risk markers compared to no treatment or other diabetes drugs like sitagliptin or insulin glargine. The benefits lasted up to 3 years in follow-up studies, though it was not as effective as liraglutide in one comparison. Most side effects were mild to moderate stomach issues that went away over time.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalDrugs, 2012
Citations17
Relative citation ratio0.60
NIH percentile34
Molecules exenatide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

Subcutaneous exenatide extended-release (ER; Bydureon™; also known as exenatide once weekly), a glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist, provides a convenient, simple, once-weekly regimen that is approved in adult patients with type 2 diabetes as adjunctive monotherapy to diet plus exercise (in the US; not as first-line therapy) and/or as combination therapy with specific oral antihyperglycaemic drugs (OADs) in patients with inadequately controlled type 2 diabetes despite treatment with these OADs (US and Europe). This article reviews the clinical efficacy and tolerability of exenatide ER in the treatment of adult patients with type 2 diabetes and gives a brief overview of its pharmacological properties. In several short-term (24-30 weeks) well designed trials, adjunctive subcutaneously injectable exenatide ER once weekly, as monotherapy or in combination with OADs, significantly improved glycaemic control, bodyweight and some surrogate markers of cardiovascular risk in adult patients with inadequately controlled type 2 diabetes despite diet and exercise and/or treatment with OADs. Furthermore, the beneficial effects of adjunctive exenatide ER therapy were sustained in extension studies of up to 3 years of treatment. Overall, the intensity of glycaemic control with exenatide ER was generally better than that observed with the exenatide immediate-release formulation (twice daily), sitagliptin or insulin glargine. Exenatide ER was shown to be noninferior to metformin in terms of glycaemic efficacy, but did not meet the criteria for noninferiority versus liraglutide. In treatment-naive patients, exenatide ER treatment did not meet noninferiority criteria versus pioglitazone, whereas in treatment-experienced patients, exenatide ER provided better glycaemic control than pioglitazone. Improvements in glycaemic control with exenatide ER and, in general, with other antihyperglycaemic agents were reflected in significant improvements from baseline in treatment satisfaction and health-related quality-of-life measures. Exenatide ER was generally well tolerated in patients participating in these trials, with most treatment-emergent adverse events being of a gastrointestinal nature, of mild to moderate severity, transient and of a similar nature and incidence to those occurring with the exenatide immediate-release formulation. Thus, exenatide ER is a useful option for the treatment of type 2 diabetes, particularly in patients where bodyweight loss is an essential aspect of the individual patient's management.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 22867046 ↗

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