Emulating the GRADE trial using real world data: retrospective comparative effectiveness study.
BMJ · 2022
Last updated 2026-05-28In a study of 8,252 adults with type 2 diabetes on metformin, liraglutide was more effective at keeping blood sugar under control than glimepiride or sitagliptin. The median time before blood sugar rose to unsafe levels was 764 days for liraglutide, compared to 442 days for glimepiride and 427 days for sitagliptin. No major differences were found in other health outcomes like hospital stays or complications.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | BMJ, 2022 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 20 |
| Relative citation ratio | 1.62 |
| NIH percentile | 67 |
| Molecules | — |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes, Cardiovascular Risk Reduction |
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To emulate the GRADE (Glycemia Reduction Approaches in Diabetes: A Comparative Effectiveness Study) trial using real world data before its publication. GRADE directly compared second line glucose lowering drugs for their ability to lower glycated hemoglobin A (HbA).
DESIGN: Observational study.
SETTING: OptumLabs® Data Warehouse (OLDW), a nationwide claims database in the US, 25 January 2010 to 30 June 2019.
PARTICIPANTS: Adults with type 2 diabetes and HbA 6.8-8.5% while using metformin monotherapy, identified according to the GRADE trial specifications, who also used glimepiride, liraglutide, sitagliptin, or insulin glargine.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The primary outcome was time to HbA ≥7.0%. Secondary outcomes were time to HbA >7.5%, incident microvascular complications, incident macrovascular complications, adverse events, all cause hospital admissions, and all cause mortality. Propensity scores were estimated using the gradient boosting machine method, and inverse propensity score weighting was used to emulate randomization of the treatment groups, which were then compared using Cox proportional hazards regression.
RESULTS: 8252 people were identified (19.7% of adults starting the study drugs in OLDW) who met eligibility criteria for the GRADE trial (glimepiride arm=4318, liraglutide arm=690, sitagliptin arm=2993, glargine arm=251). The glargine arm was excluded from analyses owing to small sample size. Median times to HbA ≥7.0% were 442 days (95% confidence interval 394 to 480 days) for glimepiride, 764 (741 to not calculable) days for liraglutide, and 427 (380 to 483) days for sitagliptin. Liraglutide was associated with lower risk of reaching HbA ≥7.0% compared with glimepiride (hazard ratio 0.57, 95% confidence interval 0.43 to 0.75) and sitagliptin (0.55, 0.41 to 0.73). Results were consistent for the secondary outcome of time to HbA >7.5%. No significant differences were observed among treatment groups for the remaining secondary outcomes.
CONCLUSIONS: In this emulation of the GRADE trial, liraglutide was statistically significantly more effective at maintaining glycemic control than glimepiride or sitagliptin when added to metformin monotherapy. Generating timely evidence on medical treatments using real world data as a complement to prospective trials is of value.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 36191949 ↗