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Efficacy and safety of once-weekly semaglutide 1.0mg vs once-daily liraglutide 1.2mg as add-on to 1-3 oral antidiabetic drugs in subjects with type 2 diabetes (SUSTAIN 10).

Diabetes Metab · 2020

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a 30-week study of 577 adults with type 2 diabetes, once-weekly semaglutide (1.0mg) reduced blood sugar levels by 1.7% and body weight by 5.8kg, compared to a 1.0% reduction in blood sugar and 1.9kg weight loss with once-daily liraglutide (1.2mg). More participants achieved blood sugar targets and significant weight loss with semaglutide, but it also caused more stomach-related side effects and led to more people stopping treatment early.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalDiabetes Metab, 2020
Citations295
Relative citation ratio16.49
NIH percentile99
Molecules semaglutide, liraglutide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

AIMS: SUSTAIN 10 compared the efficacy and safety of the anticipated most frequent semaglutide dose (1.0mg) with the current most frequently prescribed liraglutide dose in Europe (1.2mg), reflecting clinical practice. METHODS: In this phase 3b, open-label trial, 577 adults with type 2 diabetes (HbA 7.0-11.0%) on 1-3 oral antidiabetic drugs were randomized 1:1 to subcutaneous once-weekly semaglutide 1.0mg or subcutaneous once-daily liraglutide 1.2mg. Primary and confirmatory secondary endpoints were changes in HbA and body weight from baseline to week 30, respectively. RESULTS: Mean HbA (baseline 8.2%) decreased by 1.7% with semaglutide and 1.0% with liraglutide (estimated treatment difference [ETD] -0.69%; 95% confidence interval [CI] -0.82 to -0.56, P<0.0001). Mean body weight (baseline 96.9kg) decreased by 5.8kg with semaglutide and 1.9kg with liraglutide (ETD -3.83kg; 95% CI -4.57 to -3.09, P<0.0001). The proportions of subjects achieving glycaemic targets of<7.0% and=6.5%, weight loss of=5% and=10%, and a composite endpoint of HbA<7.0% without severe or blood glucose-confirmed symptomatic hypoglycaemia and no weight gain were greater with semaglutide vs liraglutide (all P<0.0001). Both treatments had similar safety profiles, except for more frequent gastrointestinal disorders (the most common adverse events [AEs]) and AEs leading to premature treatment discontinuation with semaglutide vs liraglutide (43.9% vs 38.3% and 11.4% vs 6.6%, respectively). CONCLUSION: Semaglutide was superior to liraglutide in reducing HbA and body weight. Safety profiles were generally similar, except for higher rates of gastrointestinal AEs with semaglutide vs liraglutide.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 31539622 ↗

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