Safety and efficacy of IDegLira titrated once weekly versus twice weekly in patients with type 2 diabetes uncontrolled on oral antidiabetic drugs: DUAL VI randomized clinical trial.
Diabetes Obes Metab · 2017
Last updated 2026-05-28In a 32-week study of 420 adults with type 2 diabetes, researchers compared two ways to adjust doses of the drug IDegLira. Both methods—titrating once weekly based on 2 blood sugar readings or twice weekly based on 3 readings—led to similar improvements in blood sugar control, with average HbA1c dropping from about 8.2% to 6.1% in both groups. Weight loss was slightly greater with the twice-weekly method (-2.0 kg vs -1.0 kg), and severe low blood sugar events were rare in both groups (0.16 vs 0.76 events per year).
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Diabetes Obes Metab, 2017 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 52 |
| Relative citation ratio | 2.21 |
| NIH percentile | 76 |
| Molecules | — |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
AIMS: To compare the safety and efficacy of a simpler titration algorithm for insulin degludec/liraglutide (IDegLira) with that used in previous DUAL trials in insulin-naïve patients with type 2 diabetes.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: This 32-week, open-label, non-inferiority trial randomized adults with type 2 diabetes uncontrolled on metformin ± pioglitazone to receive IDegLira, titrated either once weekly, based on the mean of 2 pre-breakfast plasma glucose (PG) readings (n = 210), or twice weekly, based on the mean of 3 pre-breakfast PG readings (n = 210).
RESULTS: Mean HbA1c decreased from 8.2% (65 mmol/mol) to 6.1% (43 mmol/mol) with once-weekly titration and from 8.1% (65 mmol/mol) to 6.0% (42 mmol/mol) with twice-weekly titration; non-inferiority was confirmed (estimated treatment difference: 0.12% [-0.04; 0.28] , 1.30 mmol/mol [-0.41; 3.01] ). Approximately 90% of patients achieved HbA1c < 7% in each arm. Mean fasting PG was similar after 32 weeks. Weight change was -1.0 kg vs -2.0 kg for once-weekly vs twice-weekly titration. Rates of severe or blood glucose-confirmed symptomatic hypoglycaemia were low in both arms: 0.16 events/patient-year of exposure (PYE) for once-weekly, 0.76 events/PYE for twice-weekly titration. Mean IDegLira dose at 32 weeks was 41 dose steps (41 U IDeg/1.48 mg Lira) for both arms. Overall adverse event rates were 207.8 and 241.3 events/100 PYE with once-weekly and twice-weekly titration, respectively.
CONCLUSION: A pragmatic titration algorithm with once-weekly adjustments based on 2 PG readings resulted in a safety and glycaemic efficacy profile similar to that with twice-weekly adjustments based on 3 preceding PG values in insulin-naïve patients.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 28124817 ↗