Pancreatic safety in Japanese patients with type 2 diabetes treated with once weekly dulaglutide 0.75 mg up to 52 weeks in phase 3 clinical trials.
Endocr J · 2017
Last updated 2026-05-28In three phase 3 clinical trials involving Japanese patients with type 2 diabetes, dulaglutide 0.75 mg taken once weekly did not show a higher risk of acute pancreatitis compared to other treatments. Out of 917 patients on dulaglutide, only 2 (0.2%) developed confirmed acute pancreatitis, and transient increases in pancreatic enzymes were seen in 2% of patients, similar to other groups.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Endocr J, 2017 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 4 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.14 |
| NIH percentile | 9 |
| Molecules | dulaglutide |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
The effects of incretin therapies on pancreatic safety are currently being evaluated. In 3 phase 3 clinical studies of once weekly dulaglutide 0.75 mg (dulaglutide) in Japanese patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D), symptoms suggestive of acute pancreatitis as well as pancreatic enzymes were assessed and the risk of acute pancreatitis was evaluated. Patients who met any of the predefined criteria (clinical signs/symptoms of acute pancreatitis, confirmed amylase or lipase level ≥3 times the upper limit of normal [ULN], abdominal imaging of the pancreas) were adjudicated for acute pancreatitis by a blinded external committee. A total of 43 events in 40 patients (dulaglutide, 35/917 patients; liraglutide, 2/137 patients; insulin glargine, 2/180 patients; and placebo, 2/70 patients) were adjudicated (1 patient had events adjudicated during both placebo and dulaglutide treatment); 2 patients treated with dulaglutide had acute pancreatitis confirmed (2/917 [0.2%]; 2.651 patients/1,000 patient-years). One of these patients was diagnosed by the investigator with acute pancreatitis related to dulaglutide, but there was no typical abdominal pain. The event in the other patient occurred following an endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine needle aspiration. Transient increases in lipase ≥3×ULN were observed in 2% of patients in both the dulaglutide and liraglutide groups; the incidence in dulaglutide-treated patients was not significantly different from the incidences in liraglutide, placebo-, or insulin glargine-treated patients. Results of systematic assessments of pancreatic safety in 3 phase 3 studies for up to 52 weeks do not suggest an increased risk of acute pancreatitis in Japanese patients treated with dulaglutide.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 27853058 ↗
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