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Tirzepatide Improved Markers of Islet Cell Function and Insulin Sensitivity in People With T2D (SURPASS-2).

J Clin Endocrinol Metab · 2024

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study of 1,879 people with type 2 diabetes, tirzepatide (at doses of 5, 10, or 15 mg) improved markers of insulin production and sensitivity more than semaglutide (1 mg) over 40 weeks. Specifically, tirzepatide increased a measure of insulin-producing cell function by 96.9% to 120.4% compared to 84.0% with semaglutide, and reduced insulin resistance by 15.5% to 24.0% versus 5.1% with semaglutide. Blood sugar control and weight loss were also greater with tirzepatide across all groups.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalJ Clin Endocrinol Metab, 2024
Citations17
Relative citation ratio2.40
NIH percentile79
Molecules tirzepatide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

CONTEXT: In previous SURPASS studies tirzepatide reduced hemoglobin glycated A1c (HbA1c) and body weight and improved markers of insulin sensitivity and β-cell function to a greater extent than comparators. OBJECTIVE: Explore changes in biomarkers of β-cell function and insulin sensitivity and in efficacy profiles in baseline biomarker quartile analyses with tirzepatide compared to semaglutide. DESIGN: Post hoc analysis of SURPASS-2 phase 3 trial (participants randomly assigned to receive weekly subcutaneous tirzepatide or semaglutide for 40 weeks). SETTING: Post hoc analysis of 128 sites in 8 countries. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 1879 participants with type 2 diabetes. INTERVENTIONS: Once-weekly tirzepatide (5, 10, 15 mg) or semaglutide 1 mg. MAIN OUTCOMES MEASURES: Change in homeostatic model assessment indices for pancreatic β-cell function (HOMA2-B) and for insulin resistance (HOMA2-IR), fasting glucagon, fasting C-peptide, and fasting insulin. RESULTS: At week 40, a greater increase in HOMA2-B was seen with tirzepatide (5, 10, 15 mg) doses (96.9-120.4%) than with semaglutide 1 mg (84.0%) (P < .05). There was a greater reduction in HOMA2-IR with all doses of tirzepatide (15.5%-24.0%) than with semaglutide 1 mg (5.1%) (P < .05). Tirzepatide 10 and 15 mg resulted in a significant reduction in both fasting C-peptide (5.2%-6.0%) and fasting glucagon (53.0%-55.3%) compared with an increase of C-peptide (3.3%) and a reduction of glucagon (47.7%) with semaglutide 1 mg (P < .05). HbA1c and body weight reductions were greater with all tirzepatide doses than semaglutide within each HOMA2-B and HOMA2-IR baseline quartile. CONCLUSION: In this post hoc analysis, improvements in HbA1c and weight loss were consistent and significantly higher with tirzepatide, regardless of baseline β-cell function and insulin resistance, compared with semaglutide.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 38252888 ↗

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