PIONEER REAL Japan: Primary results from a multicenter, prospective, real-world study of oral semaglutide in adults with type 2 diabetes in Japanese clinical practice.
J Diabetes Investig · 2024
Last updated 2026-05-28In a study of 624 adults with type 2 diabetes in Japan who started taking oral semaglutide, blood sugar control improved by an average of 0.7 percentage points after 34-44 weeks, and body weight decreased by an average of 2.8 kg. Among participants aged 75 or older, blood sugar control improved by 0.5 percentage points and body weight decreased by 2.7 kg. Side effects were reported by 25.8% of participants, with gastrointestinal issues being the most common reason for stopping the medication.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | J Diabetes Investig, 2024 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 15 |
| Relative citation ratio | 3.12 |
| NIH percentile | 85 |
| Molecules | semaglutide |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
AIMS/INTRODUCTION: PIONEER REAL Japan was a non-interventional prospective study of oral semaglutide in adults with type 2 diabetes in Japanese clinical practice.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Adults naïve to injectable glucose-lowering therapies initiated oral semaglutide in routine clinical practice and were followed for 34-44 weeks. The primary endpoint was change in glycated hemoglobin (HbA) from baseline to end of study; the co-primary endpoint was number of adverse events (AEs). Secondary endpoints included change in bodyweight from baseline to end of study. Analyses were also carried out for subgroups aged <75 and ≥75 years.
RESULTS: A total of 624 participants initiated oral semaglutide; 578 completed the study. Mean baseline HbA and bodyweight were 7.7% and 72.4 kg, respectively. At end of study, estimated change (95% confidence interval [CI]) in HbA from baseline was -0.7 percentage points (-0.77, -0.61) overall, -0.8 percentage points (-0.86, -0.67) in the <75 years subgroup and -0.5 percentage points (-0.68, -0.41) in the ≥75 years subgroup (all P < 0.0001). Estimated change (95% CI) in bodyweight was -2.8 (-3.19, -2.50) kg overall, -2.9 (-3.38, -2.49) kg in the <75 years subgroup and - 2.7 (-3.18, -2.14) kg in the ≥75 years subgroup (all P < 0.0001). AEs occurred in 161 (25.8%) participants: 99 of 423 (23.4%) and 62 of 201 (30.8%) participants in the <75 and ≥75 years subgroups, respectively. Gastrointestinal AEs were the AEs most frequently leading to oral semaglutide discontinuation.
CONCLUSIONS: In routine clinical practice, HbA and bodyweight were significantly reduced from baseline in adults initiating oral semaglutide, including those aged ≥75 years, with no new safety concerns.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 39172634 ↗
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