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Effect of exenatide after short-time intensive insulin therapy on glycaemic remission maintenance in type 2 diabetes patients: a randomized controlled trial.

Sci Rep · 2017

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study of 129 newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes patients, those who received 12 weeks of exenatide after a 3-week intensive insulin therapy had higher rates of blood sugar control lasting 1 year (68.2%) and 2 years (53.0%) compared to those who only received insulin therapy (36.5% and 31.8%, respectively). However, these benefits were only observed while patients were actively taking exenatide and disappeared after stopping the drug.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalSci Rep, 2017
Citations10
Relative citation ratio0.34
NIH percentile21
Molecules exenatide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

Early short-term intensive insulin (STII) therapy can induce drug-free glycemic remission for up to 1 year in half of newly diagnosed type 2 diabetic mellitus (T2DM) patients. Whether exenatide following STII therapy will induce higher long-term glycaemic remission is currently unknown. To assess the effect of STII+ exenatide therapy, compared with STII only, on maintenance of glycaemic remission in newly diagnosed T2DM patients. In this randomized, parallel-group, open-label, controlled trial, 129 patients (66 in STII+ exenatide group and 63 in STII only group) firstly completed 3-week STII therapy, then STII+ exenatide group was treated with exenatide for 12 weeks further. The cumulative probabilities of 1-year and 2-year glycaemic remission in STII+ exenatide group were 68.2 ± 5.7% and 53.0 ± 6.1%, which were significantly higher than STII only group (36.5 ± 6.1% and 31.8 ± 5.9%) (p-values < 0.001). Patients in STII+ exenatide group, compared with STII only group, showed significantly decreased levels of waist (82.2 (81.0, 83.5) cm v.s. 84.2 (82.7, 85.7) cm, p = 0.048) and HbA1c (5.83 (5.60, 6.06)% v.s. 6.49 (6.20, 6.77)%, p < 0.001) after 12-week exenatide treatment, but these differences disappeared after 1-year and 2-year follow-up. As conclusions, Improved effect of sequential exenatide after STII therapy on maintenance of glycaemic remission only occurred during exenatide treatment and lost upon treatment cessation.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 28539618 ↗

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