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Real-world clinical responses in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus adding exenatide BID (EBID) or mealtime insulin to basal insulin: a retrospective study using electronic medical record data.

Curr Med Res Opin · 2018

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study of 1,249 patients with type 2 diabetes, adding exenatide twice daily (EBID) to basal insulin worked as well as adding mealtime insulin in lowering blood sugar control over 6 months. Patients on EBID experienced less low blood sugar (3.1% vs 11.1% at A1C <6.5%) and lost more weight (-9.0 vs -3.2 pounds at A1C <6.5%) compared to those on mealtime insulin.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalCurr Med Res Opin, 2018
Citations1
Relative citation ratio0.07
NIH percentile6
Molecules exenatide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

AIM: Exenatide twice daily (EBID) and mealtime insulin are effective add-on therapies to basal insulin for type 2 diabetes patients in clinical trials. This study used electronic medical record (EMR) data to evaluate analogous real-world clinical responses. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Adult patients initiating EBID or mealtime insulin as add-on to basal insulin during January 2008-March 2013 were identified in a US EMR database. EBID patients were propensity score matched 1:1 to mealtime insulin patients. Cohorts were followed for 12 months before (baseline) and 6 months after the index. A1C, hypoglycemic events, change in weight, and other clinical measures were evaluated by A1C attainment level (<6.5, < 7, < 7.5, <8, <9%) and baseline A1C. RESULTS: In total, 1249 EBID patients were matched to 1249 mealtime insulin patients. During follow-up, the percentage reaching A1C levels was similar for EBID vs mealtime insulin cohorts for all attainment levels (<7%: 27.8% vs 24.2%; < 9%: 79.7% vs 79.2%; p = NS). The percentage reaching A1C < 7% was similar for both cohorts with different baseline A1C. EBID patients had less hypoglycemia at all attainment levels (3.1% vs 11.1% [<6.5%]; 2.5% vs 4.7% [<9%]; all p < .03) and more weight loss (-9.0 vs -3.2 lb [<6.5%]; -3.4 vs +0.8 lb [<9%]; all p < .01). CONCLUSIONS: EBID added to basal insulin was as effective in a real-world setting as mealtime insulin added to basal insulin in reducing A1C, with less weight gain and less hypoglycemia for a wide range of A1C attainment levels and baseline values.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 29394878 ↗

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