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Clinical effectiveness of liraglutide across body mass index in patients with type 2 diabetes in the United States: a retrospective cohort study.

Adv Ther · 2014

Last updated 2026-05-28

A study of 3,005 U.S. adults with type 2 diabetes found that after 6 months of taking liraglutide, blood sugar control improved by an average of 0.84% to 1.02% across different BMI groups, with no significant differences between them. About 37% to 41% of patients reached a blood sugar target of less than 7%, and body weight dropped by 1.5 to 4.0 kilograms. Severe low blood sugar events were rare, occurring in just 0.2% of patients.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalAdv Ther, 2014
Citations32
Relative citation ratio1.02
NIH percentile51
Molecules liraglutide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes, Obesity

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Clinical trials have shown that liraglutide effectively lowers glycated hemoglobin A1c (A1C) levels in adult patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D). However, no studies have evaluated the effectiveness of liraglutide by body mass index (BMI) in the United States (US) in clinical practice. This study examined liraglutide's clinical effectiveness to lower A1C and body weight after 6 months in T2D patients stratified by baseline BMI. METHODS: This was a retrospective cohort study using the General Electric Centricity electronic medical records database. Adult patients with T2D (≥18 years and BMI≥ 25 kg/m(2)) and A1C >7% at baseline who started liraglutide between January 1, 2010 and January 31, 2013 and who did not use insulin or a glucagon-like peptide-1 analog 12 months before initiating liraglutide (N = 3,005) were selected. Changes from baseline, stratified by BMI, in A1C, body weight, A1C <7% goal attainment, and incidence of severe hypoglycemia at 6-month follow-up were examined. RESULTS: After 6 months, A1C levels decreased on average by 0.95%, 1.02%, 0.99%, and 0.84% for BMI categories 25.0-29.9 (n = 333), 30.0-34.9 (n = 793), 35.0-39.9 (n = 821), and ≥40.0 kg/m(2) (n = 1,058), respectively (P = 0.30). The proportions of patients achieving A1C <7% at 6 months were 38.2%, 37.0%, 40.9%, and 41.0% (P = 0.54). The absolute body weight decreased by 1.5 to 4.0 kg across BMI and the rate of severe hypoglycemia (0.2%) was low. CONCLUSION: Patients with T2D experienced statistically significant decreases in A1C and body weight after initiating liraglutide regardless of their BMI. Liraglutide reduced A1C equally well across baseline BMI in clinical practice in the US.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 25245811 ↗

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