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Relationship of vascular complications and exenatide therapy failure in type 2 diabetic patients.

Acta Clin Croat · 2013

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study of 91 people with type 2 diabetes starting exenatide, 33% stopped the drug within about 105 days because their blood sugar control worsened. Those who stopped had higher fasting blood sugar (11.5 vs 10.2 mmol/L), higher kidney-related lab values, and more frequent complications like retinopathy (56.7% vs 27.9%), chronic kidney disease (43.7% vs 24.7%), coronary artery disease (53.3% vs 31.1%), and peripheral artery disease (60% vs 34.4%).

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalActa Clin Croat, 2013
Citations3
Relative citation ratio0.09
NIH percentile7
Molecules exenatide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

Exenatide is an incretin mimetic that acts through glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor accepted as a successful novel glucose-lowering agent in type 2 diabetes. The aim of this study was to explore the possible predictive factors for exenatide efficacy among baseline characteristics of type 2 diabetic patients. We observed basic anthropometric measurements, laboratory findings and diabetic complications in ninety-one type 2 diabetic patients starting exenatide therapy. There were forty-six (50.5%) male and forty-five (49.5%) female patients, median age 58 (31-76) years, body mass index 38.95 +/- 4.35 kg/m2, duration of diabetes 10 (1-30) years and HbAlc level 8.3 +/- 1.4%. Thirty (33%) patients stopped therapy because of glycemic dysregulation during 105 (21-390) days on therapy. These patients differed statistically significantly from those that continued therapy according to the following seven variables: higher fasting glucose blood concentration (11.5 mmol/L (5.6-20) vs. 10.2 mmol/L (5-19), higher serum creatinine concentration (93 micromol/L (44-149) vs. 72 micromol/L (44-124), more frequent diabetic complications including retinopathy (56.7% vs. 27.9%), chronic kidney disease (43.7% vs. 24.7%), coronary artery disease (53.3% vs. 31.1%) and peripheral artery disease (60% vs. 34.4%), and less often concomitant metformin and exenatide therapy (62% vs. 82%). Bivariate logistic regression identified peripheral artery disease, coronary artery disease, retinopathy, and chronic kidney disease as risk factors for glycemic dysregulation on exenatide therapy. We found reasonable to consider that a higher rate of microvascular and macrovascular complications may indicate failure of exenatide therapy in the majority of patients.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 24558765 ↗

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