Efficacy and safety of lixisenatide in patients with type 2 diabetes and renal impairment.
Diabetes Obes Metab · 2017
Last updated 2026-05-28A study looked at the diabetes drug lixisenatide in people with type 2 diabetes who had normal kidney function, mild kidney impairment, or moderate kidney impairment. The drug improved blood sugar control in all groups, and side effects like nausea were slightly more common in people with mild kidney impairment compared to those with normal function, but not in those with moderate impairment. The risk of low blood sugar was similar across all groups.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Diabetes Obes Metab, 2017 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 16 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.59 |
| NIH percentile | 34 |
| Molecules | lixisenatide |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes, Chronic Kidney Disease |
Abstract
AIMS: This post hoc assessment evaluated the efficacy and safety of once-daily, prandial glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist lixisenatide in patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D) and normal renal function (estimated glomerular filtration rate ≥90 mL/min), or mild (60-89 mL/min) or moderate (30-59 mL/min) renal impairment.
METHODS: Patients from 9 lixisenatide trials in the GetGoal clinical trial programme were categorized by baseline creatinine clearance: normal renal function (lixisenatide n = 2094, placebo n = 1150); renal impairment (mild: lixisenatide n = 637, placebo n = 414; moderate: lixisenatide n = 122, placebo n = 68). Meta-analyses of placebo-adjusted mean differences between baseline renal categories were performed for efficacy and safety outcomes.
RESULTS: HbA1c, 2-hour postprandial plasma glucose and fasting plasma glucose were comparably reduced in lixisenatide-treated patients with normal renal function, and mild and moderate renal impairment. The most common adverse events (AEs) in all renal function categories were gastrointestinal (GI), predominantly nausea and vomiting. A 14% higher incidence of GI AEs and a 10% higher incidence of nausea and vomiting were seen with mild impairment vs normal function (P = .003 for both), but no significant differences were observed between the mild and moderate impairment categories (P = .99 and P = .57, respectively), or between the moderate impairment and normal categories (P = .16 and P = .65, respectively). Additionally, the incidence of hypoglycaemia was similar in all categories.
CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates that baseline renal status does not affect efficacy outcomes in lixisenatide- vs placebo-treated patients, and that no lixisenatide dose adjustment is required for patients with T2D with mild or moderate renal impairment.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 28449324 ↗
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