Effect of exenatide, sitagliptin, or glimepiride on β-cell secretory capacity in early type 2 diabetes.
Diabetes Care · 2014
Last updated 2026-05-28In a 6-month study of 40 people with early type 2 diabetes, those taking the GLP-1 drugs exenatide or sitagliptin showed no improvement in β-cell secretory capacity—a measure of insulin-producing cell function—compared to their starting levels. However, participants taking glimepiride, a different diabetes medication, did show an increase in this measure, as well as in glucagon secretion.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Diabetes Care, 2014 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 33 |
| Relative citation ratio | 1.24 |
| NIH percentile | 58 |
| Molecules | exenatide |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Agents that augment GLP-1 effects enhance glucose-dependent β-cell insulin production and secretion and thus are hoped to prevent progressive impairment in insulin secretion characteristic of type 2 diabetes (T2D). The purpose of this study was to evaluate GLP-1 effects on β-cell secretory capacity, an in vivo measure of functional β-cell mass, early in the course of T2D.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: We conducted a randomized controlled trial in 40 subjects with early T2D who received the GLP-1 analog exenatide (n = 14), the dipeptidyl peptidase IV inhibitor sitagliptin (n = 12), or the sulfonylurea glimepiride (n = 14) as an active comparator insulin secretagogue for 6 months. Acute insulin responses to arginine (AIRarg) were measured at baseline and after 6 months of treatment with 5 days of drug washout under fasting, 230 mg/dL (glucose potentiation of arginine-induced insulin release [AIRpot]), and 340 mg/dL (maximum arginine-induced insulin release [AIRmax]) hyperglycemic clamp conditions, in which AIRmax provides the β-cell secretory capacity.
RESULTS: The change in AIRpot was significantly greater with glimepiride versus exenatide treatment (P < 0.05), and a similar trend was notable for the change in AIRmax (P = 0.1). Within each group, the primary outcome measure, AIRmax, was unchanged after 6 months of treatment with exenatide or sitagliptin compared with baseline but was increased with glimepiride (P < 0.05). α-Cell glucagon secretion (AGRmin) was also increased with glimepiride treatment (P < 0.05), and the change in AGRmin trended higher with glimepiride than with exenatide (P = 0.06).
CONCLUSIONS: After 6 months of treatment, exenatide or sitagliptin had no significant effect on functional β-cell mass as measured by β-cell secretory capacity, whereas glimepiride appeared to enhance β- and α-cell secretion.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 24969577 ↗
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