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Efficacy and safety of oral semaglutide in Japanese patients with type 2 diabetes: A subgroup analysis by baseline variables in the PIONEER 9 and PIONEER 10 trials.

J Diabetes Investig · 2022

Last updated 2026-05-28

In two 52-week trials with 701 Japanese patients with type 2 diabetes, oral semaglutide (3, 7, or 14 mg) improved blood sugar control and body weight compared to placebo or other diabetes drugs. Greater reductions in blood sugar were seen in patients with higher starting blood sugar levels, while body weight changes varied slightly by dose and baseline blood sugar. Side effects were similar across different patient groups.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalJ Diabetes Investig, 2022
Citations21
Relative citation ratio1.78
NIH percentile70
Molecules semaglutide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

AIMS/INTRODUCTION: To assess the impact of baseline characteristics on the efficacy and safety of oral semaglutide in Japanese patients with type 2 diabetes. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In the Peptide InnOvatioN for Early diabEtes tReatment (PIONEER) 9 and 10 trials, Japanese patients were randomized to once-daily oral semaglutide (3, 7, or 14 mg) or a comparator (placebo or once-daily subcutaneous liraglutide 0.9 mg in PIONEER 9; once-weekly subcutaneous dulaglutide 0.75 mg in PIONEER 10) for 52 weeks, with 5 weeks of follow up. An exploratory analysis grouped patients in each trial according to baseline glycated hemoglobin (HbA ; ≤8.0, >8.0-≤9.0, or >9.0%), body mass index (<25, ≥25-<30, or ≥30 kg/m ) and, for PIONEER 10 only, by background medication (sulfonylurea, glinide, thiazolidinedione, α-glucosidase inhibitor, sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitor). Efficacy (changes from baseline to week 26 in HbA and bodyweight) and safety were assessed. RESULTS: Seven hundred and one patients were included (PIONEER 9: N = 243; PIONEER 10: N = 458). In both trials, HbA reductions increased as baseline HbA increased; there were no other apparent patterns between the variables investigated and HbA or bodyweight changes. There was one statistically significant subgroup interaction between baseline HbA and estimated treatment differences in bodyweight change for oral semaglutide 14 mg versus placebo in PIONEER 9 (P = 0.0286). Baseline HbA , baseline body mass index and background medication did not appear to affect the proportions of patients reporting adverse events. CONCLUSIONS: Oral semaglutide is effective across a range of baseline subgroups of Japanese patients with type 2 diabetes, with no unexpected safety findings.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 35112504 ↗

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