Mode of administration of dulaglutide: implications for treatment adherence.
Patient Prefer Adherence · 2016
Last updated 2026-05-28Dulaglutide is a once-weekly injectable medication for type 2 diabetes that improved blood sugar control and weight loss in studies, with a low risk of low blood sugar similar to other GLP-1 drugs. Compared to other treatments, patients reported higher satisfaction (34%-39% improvement) and fewer concerns about injections, with 97.2% successfully using the auto-injector on their first try. The device is designed to be easy to use, requiring no needle handling or dose adjustments based on patient factors.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Patient Prefer Adherence, 2016 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 15 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.57 |
| NIH percentile | 33 |
| Molecules | dulaglutide |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes, Obesity |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Medication complexity/burden can be associated with nonadherence in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Patients' satisfaction with their treatment is an important consideration for physicians. Strategies like using longer acting efficacious agents with less frequent dosing may help adherence.
OBJECTIVE: To explore the mode of administration of dulaglutide and its implications for treatment adherence in T2DM.
METHODS: PubMed search using the term "Dulaglutide" through October 31, 2015 was conducted. Published articles, press releases, and abstracts presented at national/international meetings were considered.
RESULTS/CONCLUSION: Dulaglutide is a once-weekly glucagon like peptide-1 analog with a low intraindividual variability. Phase III trials demonstrated significant improvements in glycemia and weight, with a low hypoglycemia risk similar to liraglutide/exenatide, but with substantially fewer injections. A significant improvement was observed in the total Diabetes Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire score, Impact of Weight on Self-Perception, and perceived frequency of hyperglycemia with dulaglutide when compared with placebo, exenatide, liraglutide, or metformin. Treatment satisfaction scores showed an improvement with dulaglutide (34%-39%) when compared with exenatide (31%). A positive experience with a high initial (97.2%) and final (99.1%) injection success rate along with a significant reduction in patients' fear of self-injecting, as measured by the modified self-injecting subscale of the Diabetes Fear of Injecting and Self-Testing Questionnaire and Medication Delivery Device Assessment Battery, was found. Its acceptance was high (>96%) among a variety of patients including patients who fear injections and injection-naïve users. Dulaglutide is available as a single-dose automatic self-injecting device, which has a low volume, does not need reconstitution, and avoids patient handling of the needle. Dose adjustment based on weight, sex, age, race, ethnicity, or injection-site is not necessary. In chronic diseases like diabetes where patients need lifelong medications, the efficacy, safety, and convenience of a once-weekly, easy-to-use, self-injecting device should encourage patient adherence to dulaglutide therapy.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 27330280 ↗
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