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Dulaglutide (LY-2189265) for the treatment of type 2 diabetes.

Expert Rev Clin Pharmacol · 2016

Last updated 2026-05-28

Dulaglutide is a once-weekly injection for adults with type 2 diabetes that helps lower blood sugar by increasing insulin and reducing glucagon in a way that depends on blood sugar levels. In studies involving over 5,000 patients, dulaglutide at a 1.5 mg dose was more effective than metformin, sitagliptin, insulin glargine, and twice-daily exenatide at improving blood sugar control, and was similarly effective to liraglutide. Patients also experienced a small but consistent weight loss. The most common side effects were mild and temporary stomach issues like nausea.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalExpert Rev Clin Pharmacol, 2016
Citations25
Relative citation ratio0.94
NIH percentile48
Molecules dulaglutide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

Dulaglutide is a new once-weekly glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist for the management of hyperglycemia in adult patients with type 2 diabetes. It stimulates dose-dependent insulin secretion and reduces glucagon secretion, both in a glucose-dependent manner. Efficacy on blood glucose control and safety were demonstrated in the large AWARD program in type 2 diabetic patients treated with diet, metformin, dual oral therapy or insulin lispro with or without metformin, confirming findings of pilot studies in Caucasian patients and data in Japanese patients. Dulaglutide 1.5 mg once weekly was superior to metformin, sitagliptin, insulin glargine and exenatide twice daily, and non-inferior to liraglutide 1.8 mg once daily regarding the reduction in glycated hemoglobin. A modest but significant weight loss was consistently observed. Most frequent adverse events were transient and generally mild gastrointestinal disturbances. Clinical outcomes of dulaglutide will not be known until the large prospective cardiovascular outcome trial REWIND is complete.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 26761217 ↗

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