The Benefit of Insulin Degludec/Liraglutide (IDegLira) Compared With Basal-Bolus Insulin Therapy is Consistent Across Participant Subgroups With Type 2 Diabetes in the DUAL VII Randomized Trial.
J Diabetes Sci Technol · 2021
Last updated 2026-05-28In a study of people with type 2 diabetes, a once-daily treatment combining insulin degludec and liraglutide (IDegLira) worked as well as a more complex basal-bolus insulin regimen at lowering blood sugar, with average final blood sugar levels below 7%. Across all participant groups—regardless of age, weight, diabetes duration, or starting blood sugar levels—IDegLira led to less severe low blood sugar, required a lower total daily insulin dose, and resulted in weight loss compared to the basal-bolus regimen.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | J Diabetes Sci Technol, 2021 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 7 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.43 |
| NIH percentile | 26 |
| Molecules | liraglutide |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Insulin degludec/liraglutide (IDegLira) results in glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) levels comparable with basal-bolus (BB) therapy. Here, we assessed the effect of once-daily IDegLira compared with BB (once-daily insulin glargine 100 U/mL and insulin aspart ≤4 times/day) across subgroups with varying characteristics.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: DUAL VII trial participants (type 2 diabetes [T2D], HbA1c 53-86 mmol/mol [7.0%-10.0%]) were subgrouped post hoc based on the following baseline characteristics: HbA1c (≤58.5, >58.5 to ≤69.4, and >69.4 mmol/mol; ≤7.5%, >7.5 to ≤8.5%, and >8.5%), body mass index (<30, ≥30 to <35, and ≥35 kg/m), age (18 to <65 and ≥65 years), duration of diabetes (≥0 to 10 and ≥10 years), total pretrial daily basal insulin dose (20 to <30, ≥30 to <40, and ≥40 to ≤50 U), and fasting plasma glucose (<7.2 mmol/L/<130 mg/dL and ≥7.2 mmol/L/≥130 mg/dL).
RESULTS: Compared with BB, and in all subgroups, IDegLira treatment consistently gave similar HbA1c reductions, less severe or blood glucose-confirmed hypoglycemia, lower end-of-trial (EOT) total daily insulin dose, and weight loss. In all subgroups, mean EOT HbA1c was ≤53 mmol/mol (≤7.0%). The greatest HbA1c reduction occurred in the highest baseline HbA1c subgroup. Overall, mean EOT daily insulin dose was 0.43 to 0.52 U/kg with IDegLira and 0.74 to 1.07 U/kg with BB. More participants achieved the triple composite endpoint (HbA1c <53 mmol/mol [<7.0%] without weight gain or hypoglycemia) with IDegLira vs BB across the baseline HbA1c subgroups (≤58.5 mmol/mol [44.6% vs 7.0%], >58.5 to ≤69.4 mmol/mol [41.1% vs 8.3%], and >69.4 mmol/mol [23.8% vs 3.4%]).
CONCLUSION: These results support initiating IDegLira in patients with varying baseline characteristics and uncontrolled T2D on basal insulin.
CLINICALTRIALS.GOV REGISTRATION: NCT02420262.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 32107930 ↗
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