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Achieving Normoglycemia With Tirzepatide: Analysis of SURPASS 1-4 Trials.

Diabetes Care · 2023

Last updated 2026-05-28

In four clinical trials with 3,229 participants, tirzepatide helped a significant number of people with diabetes lower their blood sugar control to near-normal levels (HbA1c below 5.7%) without increasing the risk of low blood sugar. Those who reached this goal tended to be younger, had diabetes for a shorter time, and started with better blood sugar control, while also showing improvements in weight, waist size, blood pressure, and other health markers.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalDiabetes Care, 2023
Citations32
Relative citation ratio3.19
NIH percentile85
Molecules tirzepatide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Tirzepatide is a novel single-molecule glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide/glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonist, which demonstrated unprecedented improvements in glycemic control and body weight reduction, in the SURPASS phase 3 program. In this exploratory analysis, we aimed to characterize tirzepatide-treated participants who achieved HbA1c <5.7% and evaluate changes in clinical markers associated with long-term cardiometabolic health. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Baseline characteristics and change from baseline to week 40 for several efficacy and safety parameters were analyzed according to HbA1c attainment category (<5.7%, 5.7-6.5%, and >6.5%) using descriptive statistics in participants taking ≥75% of treatment doses, without rescue medication, in the SURPASS 1-4 trials (N = 3,229). Logistic regression models with tirzepatide doses adjusted as a covariate were used to obtain odds ratios and assess the impact of patient characteristics achieving an HbA1c <5.7%. RESULTS: Tirzepatide-treated participants who achieved HbA1c <5.7% were slightly younger, with a shorter duration of diabetes and lower HbA1c value at baseline compared with those who did not achieve HbA1c <5.7%. In addition, they showed greater improvements in HbA1c, body weight, waist circumference, blood pressure, liver enzymes, and lipid parameters without increasing hypoglycemia risk. CONCLUSIONS: Normoglycemia was unprecedently achieved in a significant proportion of participants in the SURPASS clinical program, without increasing hypoglycemia risk, and was associated with an overall improvement in metabolic health.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 37673061 ↗

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