Exenatide twice daily versus insulin glargine for the treatment of type 2 diabetes in Poland - subgroup data from a randomised multinational trial GWAA.
Endokrynol Pol · 2013
Last updated 2026-05-28In a 26-week study of 80 Polish adults with type 2 diabetes, those taking exenatide twice daily saw their blood sugar control improve by 0.72% on average, similar to the 0.64% improvement in those taking insulin glargine. Exenatide users lost an average of 1.9 kg, while glargine users gained 1.6 kg. Exenatide was linked to fewer nighttime low blood sugar episodes but more nausea, vomiting, and headaches compared to glargine.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Endokrynol Pol, 2013 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 2 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.06 |
| NIH percentile | 5 |
| Molecules | exenatide |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: We explored the safety and efficacy of exenatide BID v. insulin glargine in a subgroup of Polish patients with type 2 diabetes sub-optimally controlled with metformin plus a sulfonylurea, participating in a 26-week randomised, controlled open-label trial.
MATERIAL AND METHODS: In Poland, 80 patients (HbA1c 7-10%, BMI 25-45 kg/m(2)) were randomised to exenatide 10 μg BID (n = 40) or insulin glargine once daily (n = 40). We present exploratory analyses on HbA1c, glucose profiles, body weight, hypoglycaemia and adverse events (AEs).
RESULTS: Mean (SD) baseline HbA1c was 7.9% (0.86) for exenatide and 7.8% (1.02) for insulin glargine. At Week 26, LS mean (SEM) HbA1c decreased in both groups (exenatide -0.72% [0.12]; glargine -0.64% [0.12]), as did fasting glucose. Postprandial glucose excursions after breakfast and dinner were smaller in patients treated with exenatide. LS mean (SEM) body weight decreased by -1.9 (0.48) kg with exenatide and increased by 1.6 (0.48) kg with glargine (group difference [95%CI]: -3.5 kg [-4.9 to -2.2]). Hypoglycaemia was low in both groups; nocturnal hypoglycaemia was reported for three v. seven patients (three v. 24 episodes) in the exenatide and glargine groups, respectively. Adverse events were more common with exenatide (nausea n = 22 v. n = 1, vomiting n = 5 v. n = 0, headache n = 8 v. n = 2).
CONCLUSION: This exploratory analysis confirms that findings from the global study apply to patients treated with exenatide BID and glargine in Poland, showing that exenatide BID was as effective as insulin glargine. Data suggested that changes in HbA1c were similar, with fasting glucose changes greater in the glargine group and postprandial changes greater in the exenatide BID group. Exenatide BID was associated with weight reduction, less nocturnal hypoglycaemia, but more gastrointestinal events compared to glargine.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 24186595 ↗
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