Oral Semaglutide Reduces HbA<sub>1c</sub> and Body Weight in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes Regardless of Background Glucose-Lowering Medication: PIONEER Subgroup Analyses.
Diabetes Ther · 2021
Last updated 2026-05-28In studies of 2,836 people with type 2 diabetes, those taking 14 mg of oral semaglutide daily saw greater improvements in blood sugar control (HbA1c reductions of 1.0% to 1.5%) and weight loss (2.2 kg to 5.0 kg) compared to those on placebo or other diabetes medications. These benefits were seen whether participants were also taking metformin, insulin, or other glucose-lowering drugs, with no major differences in side effects across groups.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Diabetes Ther, 2021 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 9 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.69 |
| NIH percentile | 38 |
| Molecules | semaglutide |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes, Obesity |
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The efficacy and safety of oral semaglutide, the first oral glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist, were investigated in patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D) in the Peptide InnOvatioN for Early diabEtes tReatment (PIONEER) programme. The current post-hoc exploratory subgroup analyses evaluated outcomes by background medication and insulin regimen subgroups.
METHODS: Data from patients in the PIONEER 3-5, 7 and 8 trials receiving once-daily oral semaglutide (14 mg/flexibly dosed) or a comparator (placebo, sitagliptin 100 mg or liraglutide 1.8 mg) were analysed for efficacy (glycated haemoglobin [HbA] and body weight changes from baseline to planned end of treatment) and safety outcomes. Patients were grouped according to background medication (metformin, sulphonylurea, thiazolidinedione, sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitor, insulin, or combinations thereof). Efficacy outcomes were analysed using the trial product estimand (which assumes that patients remained on the trial product without rescue medication use). A separate analysis by background insulin regimen (basal, premixed or basal-bolus) was done for PIONEER 8 using the treatment policy estimand (regardless of trial product discontinuation or rescue medication use). Safety outcomes were analysed descriptively for all patients.
RESULTS: In total, 2836 patients receiving oral semaglutide 14 mg/flexibly dosed or comparators were included. Baseline characteristics were generally similar across background medication subgroups within each trial. Diabetes duration tended to be longer in patients receiving more background medications. Greater HbA and body weight reductions were seen across background medication subgroups with oral semaglutide (changes from baseline: - 1.0 to - 1.5% and - 2.2 to - 5.0 kg, respectively) than with comparators (except for similar HbA reductions vs liraglutide). There were no statistically significant interactions by treatment and background medication subgroup for change in HbA or body weight except for change in HbA (background insulin vs insulin plus metformin) in PIONEER 8 (p = 0.0408). Changes in HbA and body weight were generally similar across insulin regimen subgroups, without significant treatment interactions by subgroup, and the total daily insulin dose was decreased for patients receiving oral semaglutide. The incidence of adverse events was generally similar in background medication subgroups.
CONCLUSION: Oral semaglutide was effective at lowering HbA and body weight, regardless of background medications, and appears suitable for a broad range of patients with T2D in combination with other glucose-lowering agents.
TRIAL REGISTRATION: Clinicaltrials.gov: NCT02607865 (PIONEER 3), NCT02863419 (PIONEER 4), NCT02827708 (PIONEER 5), NCT02849080 (PIONEER 7) and NCT03021187 (PIONEER 8).
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 33660198 ↗
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