Liraglutide as additional treatment to insulin in obese patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus.
Endocr Pract · 2013
Last updated 2026-05-28In a study of 27 obese patients with type 1 diabetes, adding liraglutide to insulin therapy for about 180 days lowered average blood sugar levels from 191 to 170 mg/dL, reduced HbA1c from 7.89% to 7.46%, and decreased body weight by about 4.6 kg. The treatment also reduced daily insulin doses by 13 units and lowered systolic blood pressure from 130 to 120 mm Hg.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Endocr Pract, 2013 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 65 |
| Relative citation ratio | 2.10 |
| NIH percentile | 75 |
| Molecules | liraglutide |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes, Obesity |
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Because approximately 40% of patients with type 1 diabetes have the metabolic syndrome, we tested the hypothesis that addition of liraglutide to insulin in obese patients with type 1 diabetes will result in an improvement in plasma glucose concentrations, a reduction in hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c), a fall in systolic blood pressure, and weight loss.
METHODS: This is a retrospective analysis of data obtained from 27 obese patients with type 1 diabetes treated with liraglutide in addition to insulin. Patients were also treated for hypertension. Paired t tests were used to compare the changes in HbA1c, insulin doses, body weight, body mass index, 4-week mean blood glucose concentrations (28-day insulin pump mean blood glucose), blood pressure, and lipid parameters prior to and 180 ± 14 days after liraglutide therapy.
RESULTS: Mean glucose concentrations fell from 191 ± 6 to 170 ± 6 mg/dL (P = .002). HbA1c fell from 7.89 ± 0.13% to 7.46 ± 0.13% (P = .001), without an increase in frequency of hypoglycemia. Mean body weight fell from 96.20 ± 3.68 kg to 91.56 ± 3.78 kg (P<.0001). Daily total and bolus doses of insulin fell from 73 ± 6 to 60 ± 4 (P = .008) units and from 40 ± 5 to 29 ± 3 units (P = .011), respectively. Mean systolic blood pressure fell from 130 ± 3 to 120 ± 4 mm Hg (P = .020).
CONCLUSION: Addition of liraglutide to insulin in obese patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus leads to improvements in glycemic control and HbA1c and to reductions in insulin dose, systolic blood pressure, and body weight.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 23807520 ↗
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