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Adherence and treatment discontinuation of oral semaglutide and once-weekly semaglutide injection at 12 month follow-up: Japanese real-world data.

J Diabetes Investig · 2024

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a 12-month study of people with type 2 diabetes in Japan, those taking the once-weekly semaglutide injection were 39% more likely to miss doses compared to those taking the oral version. The injection group also had a 45% higher chance of stopping treatment entirely, though the oral group stopped more often in the first few months. Overall, the oral version led to better long-term adherence and persistence with the medication.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalJ Diabetes Investig, 2024
Citations13
Relative citation ratio2.56
NIH percentile80
Molecules semaglutide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes, Obesity

Abstract

Adherence and treatment continuation rates of the glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist (GLP-1RA) semaglutide for both oral (O-SEMA) and subcutaneous injection (SEMA-SC) remain unknown in real-world clinical practice. This retrospective observational study compared the 12 month adherence and treatment discontinuation of O-SEMA and once-weekly SEMA-SC in patients with type 2 diabetes using a real-world claims database. SEMA-SC initiators were 1:1 propensity score-matched to O-SEMA initiators. Non-adherence was defined as <0.8 of the proportion of days covered. SEMA-SC had a significantly higher odds ratio (OR) for non-adherence than O-SEMA (OR: 1.39). The hazard ratio for treatment discontinuation, using O-SEMA as the reference, was 1.45 for SEMA-SC, although the discontinuation rate of O-SEMA was higher during the early stage. O-SEMA initiators showed significantly higher adherence and greater persistence in therapy than SEMA-SC initiators at 12 months, which could lead to earlier initiation of GLP-1RA treatment.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 39243175 ↗

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