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Efficacy and Safety of Lixisenatide in Japanese Patients with Type 2 Diabetes Insufficiently Controlled with Basal Insulin±Sulfonylurea: A Subanalysis of the GetGoal-L-Asia Study.

Horm Metab Res · 2015

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a 24-week study of 159 Japanese adults with type 2 diabetes, adding a once-daily 20 microgram dose of lixisenatide to basal insulin (with or without sulfonylurea) lowered blood sugar control by 1.1 percentage points more than placebo. About 31% of those on lixisenatide reached a blood sugar target of less than 7%, compared to 2% on placebo, and post-meal blood sugar levels dropped by 8.64 mmol/L more than placebo. Gastrointestinal side effects like nausea were more common with lixisenatide (61% vs. 12% with placebo) but were usually mild and short-lived.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalHorm Metab Res, 2015
Citations12
Relative citation ratio0.41
NIH percentile25
Molecules lixisenatide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

The aim of the study was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of once-daily lixisenatide 20 μg as add-on to basal insulin with or without sulfonylurea in Asian patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. The study as a subanalysis of the 159 Japanese patients from the 24-week double-blind GetGoal-L-Asia study (NCT00866658) who received once-daily lixisenatide or placebo. The primary endpoint was change from baseline in HbA1c evaluated using analysis of covariance. Once-daily lixisenatide significantly reduced mean HbA1c [least squares mean difference vs. placebo - 1.1% (- 12 mmol/mol); p<0.0001]. Significantly more patients in the lixisenatide group reached HbA1c targets of < 7% (53 mmol/mol; 31.4 vs. 2.3% for placebo; p<0.0001) and ≤ 6.5% (48 mmol/mol; 12.9 vs. 1.2% for placebo; p=0.0028). Lixisenatide significantly reduced 2-h postprandial plasma glucose (least squares mean difference vs. placebo-8.64 mmol/l; p<0.0001), glucose excursion (least squares mean difference vs. placebo - 7.80 mmol/l; p<0.0001) and fasting plasma glucose (least squares mean difference vs. placebo - 0.96 mmol/l; p=0.0126). Body weight was reduced with lixisenatide but with no significant difference vs. placebo. Gastrointestinal adverse events were more frequent with lixisenatide (61.1 vs. 11.5% for placebo) but were generally transient and mild-to-moderate in intensity. The incidence of symptomatic hypoglycemia was 39.0 vs. 13.5% in patients receiving sulfonylureas and 32.3 vs. 22.9% in those not receiving sulfonylureas, for lixisenatide and placebo, respectively. In Japanese patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus, once-daily lixisenatide was well tolerated and led to significant and clinically relevant improvement in glycemic control, with a pronounced effect on postprandial plasma glucose.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 26039935 ↗

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