GLPwatch

Analysis of efficacy and safety of dulaglutide 0.75 mg stratified by sex in patients with type 2 diabetes in 2 randomized, controlled phase 3 studies in Japan.

Endocr J · 2017

Last updated 2026-05-28

In two Japanese studies of people with type 2 diabetes, once-weekly dulaglutide 0.75 mg lowered blood sugar control by about 1.17% to 1.49% for both men and women. Women lost more weight or gained less weight than men, and a higher percentage of women saw improvements in both blood sugar and weight. However, women also reported more side effects, such as nausea, compared to men.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalEndocr J, 2017
Citations36
Relative citation ratio1.31
NIH percentile60
Molecules dulaglutide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

We analyzed the efficacy and safety of once weekly dulaglutide 0.75 mg by sex in 2 randomized, controlled phase 3 studies in Japanese patients with type 2 diabetes (a 52-week monotherapy study [comparator liraglutide 0.9 mg] and a 26-week combination therapy study [comparator insulin glargine]). Females comprised 18% of patients in the monotherapy study and 29% of patients in the combination therapy study. Mean reductions from baseline in glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) were similar between the sexes for dulaglutide- and liraglutide-treated patients (range -1.17% to -1.49%). Females had numerically greater weight loss or less weight gain than males across all treatment groups. The percentages of patients with reductions in both HbA1c and weight from baseline were also greater for females than for males in all treatment groups. In all treatment groups, the incidences of treatment-emergent adverse events tended to be greater among females than among males. No differences in the incidences of total or nocturnal hypoglycemia were observed between the sexes in any treatment group. Overall, in 2 studies in Japan, across all treatment groups it appeared that HbA1c lowering was unaffected by patient sex, while female patients had greater weight loss or less weight gain and greater incidence of adverse events, including nausea, compared to male patients. Incidences of patients discontinuing dulaglutide early due to adverse event were low (<10%) for both sexes, and no new safety concerns related to dulaglutide were identified for either sex. Therefore, the benefit/risk ratio for dulaglutide remains unchanged, positive for both sexes.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 28367916 ↗

Related research