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Weekly Exenatide Therapy: A Real-World Comparison of Incretin Therapies.

J Pharm Technol · 2014

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study of 78 patients with type 2 diabetes, switching to once-weekly exenatide for an average of 5.6 months led to a small but significant improvement in blood sugar control (A1C decreased by 0.35%) and an average weight loss of 1.6 kg. No major changes were seen in blood pressure or cholesterol levels, and only 2.5% of patients stopped the medication due to side effects.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalJ Pharm Technol, 2014
Citations0
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Molecules exenatide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

Traditional diabetes therapies have been associated with weight gain, hypoglycemia, and/or high secondary failure rates. Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) analog use is associated with a minimal risk of hypoglycemia, a persistent average weight loss of 2 to 3 kg, and sustained efficacy even after 3 years of use. Presently, 3 GLP-1 analogs are commercially available in the United States. To evaluate the real-world clinical utility of once weekly exenatide in type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) patients who previously received once or twice daily GLP-1 therapy. In this pre-post observational study, electronic medical records (EMRs) were reviewed to identify patients meeting all study criteria. Data collected included baseline patient demographic information, duration of diabetes, disease states, medications, pertinent laboratory data, blood pressure, height, weight, and reported adverse drug events. Primary (changes in A1C and percentage of patients reporting adverse effects of therapy) and secondary (percentage of patients with A1C of <7% and changes in weight, blood pressure, and lipids) outcomes were evaluated using appropriate statistical analysis. EMRs of 78 patients met all study criteria. Baseline patient demographic information included an average age of 61 ± 12 years, an average duration of T2DM of 14 ± 6 years, 59% of patients were male, and 93.6% were Caucasian. The baseline average body mass index was 39 ± 9.2, and mean A1C was 7.47 ± 1.45%. After a minimum of 3 months (average = 5.6 months) switchover, there were significant decreases in A1C (-0.35%; = .0067) and weight (-1.6 kg; = .0151). There were no significant changes in blood pressure or lipid levels. Two patients (2.5%) discontinued once weekly exenatide due to adverse reactions. Once weekly exenatide was generally well tolerated and significantly reduced A1C levels and body weight in patients with T2DM when switched from a shorter-acting GLP-1 analog.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 34860898 ↗

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