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Impact of dose capping in insulin glargine/lixisenatide fixed-ratio combination trials in patients with type 2 diabetes.

Curr Med Res Opin · 2019

Last updated 2026-05-28

In two clinical trials, patients with type 2 diabetes took either insulin glargine alone or a combination of insulin glargine and lixisenatide, with doses capped at 60 units. The study found that even if the insulin dose had not been capped, there would have been little to no improvement in blood sugar control for those taking insulin glargine alone, and the combination treatment still provided better blood sugar control compared to insulin glargine alone.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalCurr Med Res Opin, 2019
Citations2
Relative citation ratio0.13
NIH percentile9
Molecules lixisenatide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The LixiLan clinical trials of insulin glargine (iGlar)/lixisenatide fixed-ratio combination (iGlarLixi) investigated the safety and efficacy of iGlarLixi versus iGlar: LixiLan-O (NCT02058147) in patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D) inadequately controlled on oral antidiabetes drugs (OADs) and LixiLan-L (NCT02058160) in patients with T2D inadequately controlled on basal insulin ± OADs. In these two trials, both iGlar and iGlarLixi were titrated to a maximum (capped) dose of 60 units. We evaluated whether this may have affected the reported glycemic efficacy of iGlar, and the glycemic differences observed between treatment with iGlarLixi and iGlar. METHODS: The efficacy of iGlar under uncapped conditions was simulated in a two-step approach. First, a model characterizing the relationship between iGlar dose and fasting self-measured plasma glucose (f-SMPG) was developed. Then, the relationship between glycated hemoglobin A1 (A1C) and f-SMPG was established to translate simulated f-SMPG responses to A1C responses. RESULTS: Most patients achieved stable f-SMPG at ∼60 units/day, with no further reduction with increasing insulin dose. In comparisons of observed/capped and simulated/uncapped changes in mean A1C from baseline to Week 30, iGlarLixi consistently demonstrated treatment benefit compared with iGlar. Uncapping resulted in a slightly higher mean iGlar dose in both LixiLan-O (+0.72 units) and LixiLan-L (+2.1 units), without marked impact on f-SMPG or A1C change from baseline. CONCLUSION: Uncapping the iGlar dose in LixiLan-O and LixiLan-L would not have led to significant improvements in mean A1C reduction in the iGlar arm, supporting the conclusion that iGlarLixi provides additional, clinically relevant glycemic control versus iGlar alone.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 30550345 ↗

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