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Determining predictors of early response to exenatide in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus.

J Diabetes Res · 2015

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study of 112 patients with type 2 diabetes taking exenatide, 63 saw a significant improvement in blood sugar control (measured by HbA1c) after six months, while 49 did not. Higher baseline HbA1c levels were the only factor linked to better response, with each 1% increase in baseline HbA1c raising the chance of improvement by 5%. Patients who saw their HbA1c drop by 15-20% or more within the first three months were more likely to respond by six months.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalJ Diabetes Res, 2015
Citations26
Relative citation ratio0.94
NIH percentile48
Molecules exenatide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

Exenatide is a GLP-1 analogue used in the management of T2DM yet within a subset of patients fails due to adverse side effects or from failure to attain the end goal. This retrospective observational study aimed to determine whether we could predict response to exenatide in patients with T2DM. 112 patients on exenatide were included with patient age, gender, duration of T2DM, medications alongside exenatide and weight, BMI, and HbA1c at baseline and 3 and 6 months of exenatide use being recorded. 63 responded with 11 mmol/mol reduction from baseline HbA1c after six months and 49 did not respond to exenatide. HbA1c solely differed significantly between cohorts at baseline, 3 months, and 6 months (P < 0.05). Regression analyses identified a negative linear relationship with higher baseline HbA1c correlating to greater reductions in HbA1c by 6 months (P < 0.0001). HbA1c was the sole predictor of exenatide response with higher baseline HbA1c increasing the odds of response by 5% (P = 0.004). Patients with HbA1c reductions ≥15-20% by 3 months were more likely to be responders by 6 months (P = 0.033). Our study identified that baseline HbA1c acted as the sole predictor of exenatide response and that response may be determined after 3 months of exenatide administration.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 25688374 ↗

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