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Impact of baseline glycated haemoglobin, diabetes duration and body mass index on clinical outcomes in the LixiLan-O trial testing a titratable fixed-ratio combination of insulin glargine/lixisenatide (iGlarLixi) vs insulin glargine and lixisenatide monocomponents.

Diabetes Obes Metab · 2017

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study of 1,170 people with type 2 diabetes, a combination treatment (iGlarLixi) was more effective at improving blood sugar control than either insulin glargine or lixisenatide alone, regardless of whether participants had lower or higher baseline blood sugar levels, shorter or longer diabetes duration, or different body weights. More people achieved target blood sugar levels with the combination treatment, and it also reduced after-meal blood sugar spikes and prevented weight gain compared to insulin glargine alone, without increasing the risk of low blood sugar.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalDiabetes Obes Metab, 2017
Citations25
Relative citation ratio1.01
NIH percentile51
Molecules lixisenatide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes, Obesity

Abstract

To determine whether baseline characteristics had an impact on clinical outcomes in the LixiLan-O trial (N = 1170), we compared the efficacy and safety of iGlarLixi, a titratable fixed-ratio combination of insulin glargine 100 U (iGlar) and lixisenatide (Lixi) with iGlar or Lixi alone in patients with uncontrolled type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) on oral therapy. Subgroups according to baseline glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c; <8% or ≥8% [<64 or ≥64 mmol/mol]), T2DM disease duration (<7 or ≥7 years) and body mass index (BMI; <30 or ≥30 kg/m ) were investigated. In all subpopulations, iGlarLixi was consistently statistically superior to iGlar and Lixi alone in reducing HbA1c from baseline to week 30; higher proportions of patients achieved HbA1c <7% (<53 mmol/mol) with iGlarLixi vs iGlar and Lixi alone. Compared with iGlar, iGlarLixi resulted in a substantial decrease in 2-hour postprandial plasma glucose levels, and mitigation of weight gain, with no differences among subpopulations in incidence of symptomatic hypoglycaemia. iGlarLixi consistently improved glycaemic control compared with iGlar and Lixi alone, without weight gain or increase in hypoglycaemic risk compared with iGlar in the subpopulations tested, regardless of baseline HbA1c, disease duration and BMI.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 28432746 ↗

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