Further improvement in glycemic control after switching from exenatide two times per day to exenatide once-weekly autoinjected suspension in patients with type 2 diabetes: 52-week results from the DURATION-NEO-1 study.
BMJ Open Diabetes Res Care · 2020
Last updated 2026-05-28In a 52-week study of 315 adults with type 2 diabetes, switching from twice-daily exenatide to once-weekly exenatide injections led to an additional 0.5% improvement in blood sugar control (A1C) and further reduced fasting blood sugar. Those who stayed on once-weekly exenatide for the full year saw a 1.3% reduction in A1C from the start, and weight loss from the first 28 weeks was maintained through 52 weeks. No new safety issues were reported in either group.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | BMJ Open Diabetes Res Care, 2020 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 4 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.18 |
| NIH percentile | 12 |
| Molecules | exenatide |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Investigate the effects of switching from two times per day exenatide to once-weekly exenatide administered by autoinjector (exenatide once-weekly suspension by autoinjector (QWS-AI)) or treatment with exenatide QWS-AI for 1 year.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: In this phase III open-label study, adults with type 2 diabetes were randomized to receive exenatide QWS-AI (2 mg) or exenatide two times per day (5 mcg for 4 weeks, followed by 10 mcg) for 28 weeks. During a subsequent non-randomized 24-week extension, patients who received exenatide two times per day were switched to exenatide QWS-AI and those randomized to exenatide QWS-AI continued this treatment. Efficacy measures included changes from baseline in glycated hemoglobin (A1C), fasting plasma glucose (FPG), and body weight.
RESULTS: In total, 315 patients (mean baseline A1C of 8.5%) completed the initial 28 weeks of randomized treatment with exenatide QWS-AI (n=197) or exenatide two times per day (n=118) and were included in the 24-week extension (mean A1C of 7.0% and 7.3%, respectively, at week 28). From weeks 28-52, patients who switched from exenatide two times per day to exenatide QWS-AI had additional A1C reductions of approximately 0.5% (mean A1C change from baseline of -1.4% at week 52) and further reductions from baseline in FPG. Patients who continued exenatide QWS-AI treatment for 52 weeks showed clinically relevant A1C reductions (mean A1C change from baseline of -1.3% at week 52). Body-weight reductions achieved through week 28 were sustained at week 52 in both groups. There were no unexpected safety concerns or changes in the safety profile among patients who switched from exenatide two times per day to exenatide QWS-AI or those who continued exenatide QWS-AI treatment for 52 weeks.
CONCLUSIONS: Switching from exenatide two times per day to exenatide QWS-AI resulted in further A1C reductions and maintenance of earlier decreases in body weight, while continued therapy with exenatide QWS-AI for 52 weeks maintained A1C and body-weight reductions, without additional safety or tolerability concerns.
TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT01652716.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 33037036 ↗
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