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Preference for Oral and Injectable GLP-1 RA Therapy Profiles in Japanese Patients with Type 2 Diabetes: A Discrete Choice Experiment.

Adv Ther · 2021

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a survey of 500 Japanese adults with type 2 diabetes, most preferred oral GLP-1 drugs over injectable ones, with 62.4% willing to start a 7 mg oral dose and 64.0% a 14 mg oral dose, compared to only 13.6% and 11.0% for injectable options. The biggest factor in their choice was how the drug is taken, followed by nausea risk, weight change, and blood sugar control.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalAdv Ther, 2021
Citations37
Relative citation ratio3.63
NIH percentile88
Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists (RAs) approved to date are administered by injection; therefore, patient perceptions of an oral GLP-1 RA are unknown. This discrete choice experiment explored preferences for (unbranded) oral and injectable GLP-1 RA profiles among Japanese patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D). METHODS: An online survey was designed using literature review and qualitative interview findings, and administered to Japanese patients with T2D and HbA ≥ 7.0% receiving oral antiglycaemic medication (with no experience of injectable antiglycaemic medication). Therapy profiles were created using Japanese head-to-head trial data for orally administered semaglutide (7 mg and 14 mg), injectable dulaglutide (0.75 mg), and injectable liraglutide (0.9 mg). Profiles were not labelled. Choice tasks tested preference between hypothetical profiles, preference between profiles with actual trial data, and willingness to initiate treatment. Relative importance of attributes was determined using conditional logit regression. RESULTS: A total of 500 respondents were analysed: mean age 61.2 years; 93.8% male; mean HbA 7.6%; 78.2% with HbA ≥ 7.0 to < 8%; 89% with HbA above personal target. Mean BMI was 25.4 kg/m; 49% had obesity (≥ 25 kg/m). The treatment attribute with greatest importance was mode and frequency of administration (49.1%), followed by nausea risk (30.8%), weight change (11.3%), and HbA change (8.8%). Oral semaglutide 7 and 14 mg-like profiles were both preferred: the 7 mg-like profile was preferred over dulaglutide (by 91.0% of respondents) and liraglutide (by 89.4%); the 14 mg-like profile was preferred over dulaglutide (by 88.2%) and liraglutide (by 94.4%). Willingness to initiate treatment was also higher for orally administered semaglutide-like profiles: 62.4% with 7 mg and 64.0% with 14 mg, versus 13.6% and 11.0% with injectable GLP-1 RA-like profiles. Subgroup results were generally consistent with the overall sample. CONCLUSION: Japanese patients with T2D appear to prefer oral GLP-1 RA profiles over injectable GLP-1 RA profiles, and administration appears to be the most important factor in this decision. This highlights the unmet need for an effective and orally administered GLP-1 RA for the treatment of T2D in Japan.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 33245530 ↗