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Efficacy and Safety of 1:1 Fixed-Ratio Combination of Insulin Glargine and Lixisenatide Versus Lixisenatide in Japanese Patients With Type 2 Diabetes Inadequately Controlled on Oral Antidiabetic Drugs: The LixiLan JP-O1 Randomized Clinical Trial.

Diabetes Care · 2020

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a 52-week study of 321 Japanese patients with type 2 diabetes not well controlled by oral medications, a combination of insulin glargine and lixisenatide (iGlarLixi) improved blood sugar control more than lixisenatide alone. After 26 weeks, blood sugar levels dropped by 1.58% with the combination versus 0.51% with lixisenatide alone, and 65.2% of patients on the combination reached target blood sugar levels compared to 19.4% on lixisenatide alone.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalDiabetes Care, 2020
Citations33
Relative citation ratio1.48
NIH percentile64
Molecules lixisenatide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess the efficacy and safety of a 1:1 fixed-ratio combination of insulin glargine and lixisenatide (iGlarLixi) versus lixisenatide (Lixi) in insulin-naive Japanese patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) inadequately controlled on oral antidiabetic drugs (OADs). RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: In this phase 3, open-label, multicenter trial, 321 patients with HbA≥7.5 to ≤10.0% (58-86 mmol/mol) and fasting plasma glucose (FPG) ≤13.8 mmol/L (250 mg/dL) were randomized 1:1 to iGlarLixi or Lixi for 52 weeks. The primary end point was change in HbA at week 26. RESULTS: Change in HbA from baseline to week 26 was significantly greater with iGlarLixi (-1.58% [-17.3 mmol/mol]) than with Lixi (-0.51% [-5.6 mmol/mol]), confirming the superiority of iGlarLixi (least squares [LS] mean difference -1.07% [-11.7 mmol/mol], < 0.0001). At week 26, significantly greater proportions of patients treated with iGlarLixi reached HbA <7% (53 mmol/mol) (65.2% vs. 19.4%; < 0.0001), and FPG reductions were greater with iGlarLixi than Lixi (LS mean difference -2.29 mmol/L [-41.23 mg/dL], < 0.0001). Incidence of documented symptomatic hypoglycemia (≤3.9 mmol/L [70 mg/dL]) was higher with iGlarLixi (13.0% vs. 2.5%) through week 26, with no severe hypoglycemic events in either group. Incidence of gastrointestinal events through week 52 was lower with iGlarLixi (36.0% vs. 50.0%), and rates of treatment-emergent adverse events were similar. CONCLUSIONS: This phase 3 study demonstrated superior glycemic control and fewer gastrointestinal adverse events with iGlarLixi than with Lixi, which may support it as a new treatment option for Japanese patients with T2DM that is inadequately controlled with OADs.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 32295808 ↗

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