Adherence to antihyperglycemic medications and glucagon-like peptide 1-receptor agonists in type 2 diabetes: clinical consequences and strategies for improvement.
Patient Prefer Adherence · 2018
Last updated 2026-05-28People with type 2 diabetes often struggle to take their blood-sugar medications as prescribed, which can lead to worse blood sugar control, more hospital stays, and complications. Among newer injectable drugs called GLP-1 receptor agonists, once-weekly versions like dulaglutide, albiglutide, and extended-release exenatide tend to be taken more reliably than once-daily options such as liraglutide, and user-friendly injection devices can help patients accept injectable therapy.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Patient Prefer Adherence, 2018 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 56 |
| Relative citation ratio | 2.84 |
| NIH percentile | 83 |
| Molecules | — |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
Adherence to antihyperglycemic medications is often suboptimal in patients with type 2 diabetes, and this can contribute to poor glycemic control, increased hospitalization, and the development of diabetic complications. Reported adherence rates to antihyperglycemics vary widely among studies, and this may be related to differences in methodology for measuring adherence, patient populations, and other factors. Poor adherence may occur regardless of the specific regimen used and whether therapy is oral or injectable, and can be especially common in chronic, asymptomatic conditions, such as type 2 diabetes. More convenient drug-administration regimens and advances in formulations and delivery devices are among strategies shown to improve adherence to antihyperglycemic therapy, especially for injectable therapy. This is exemplified by technological developments made in the drug class of glucagon-like peptide 1-receptor agonists, which are a focus of this narrative review. Dulaglutide, albiglutide, and prolonged-release exenatide have an extended duration of action and can be administered once weekly, whereas such agents as liraglutide require once-daily administration. The convenience of once-weekly versus once-daily administration is associated with better adherence in real-world studies involving this class of agent. Moreover, provision of a user-friendly delivery device has been shown to overcome initial resistance to injectable therapy among patients with type 2 diabetes. This suggests that recent innovations in drug formulation (eg, ready-to-use formulations) and delivery systems (eg, single-dose prefilled pens and hidden, ready-attached needles) may be instrumental in encouraging patient acceptance. For physicians who aim to improve their patients' adherence to antihyperglycemic medications, it is thus important to consider the patient's therapeutic experience (treatment frequency, drug formulation, delivery device). Better adherence, powered by recent technological advances in the delivery of glucagon-like peptide 1-receptor agonists, may thus lead to improved clinical outcomes in type 2 diabetes.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 29765207 ↗