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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 2026-05-28

In 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.

JournalDiabetes Obes Metab, 2017
Citations52
Relative citation ratio2.21
NIH percentile76
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 ↗