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Clinical Effectiveness of Oral Semaglutide in Women with Type 2 Diabetes: A Nationwide, Multicentre, Retrospective, Observational Study (Women_ENDO2S-RWD Substudy).

Nutrients · 2025

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study of 469 women with type 2 diabetes taking oral semaglutide, blood sugar control improved by 0.9% and weight dropped by 7.2% after 12 months. Over 29% of women lost more than 10% of their body weight, and 23.5% met both blood sugar and weight loss goals. The drug worked similarly well for men, with no differences in side effects or how long people stayed on the medication.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalNutrients, 2025
Citations1
Molecules semaglutide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

Sex differences in type 2 diabetes (T2D) are a growing area of diabetes research. No data have been reported on sex differences with oral semaglutide (oSEMA) in a real-world setting. : We included people with T2D who started treatment with oSEMA in routine clinical practice between November 2021 and November 2022, with at least one report of clinical follow-up (FU) data at 3 months. We evaluated in women with T2D (WWT2D) the clinical effectiveness of oSEMA and factors associated with clinical response and persistence. We also analyzed differences in baseline characteristics, clinical effectiveness, persistence rates and safety according to biological sex. : Of the 1018 subjects [median age: 63 years, body mass index (BMI): 33.8 kg/m, HbA1c: 7.8%], 469 were WWT2D. In WWT2D, oSEMA reduced HbA1c by 0.7% [-0.1 to -1.3] and 0.9% [-0.2 to -1.5] at the 6- and 12-month FU visits, while weight decreased by 4.6% [2.0 to 7.9] and 7.2% [2.5 to 10.9], respectively. Weight loss was >10% in 29.8% of WWT2D (95% CI 25.8 to 34.1); meanwhile, the combined endpoint (HbA1c decrease ≥ 1% + weight reduction ≥ 5%) was achieved in 23.5% (95% CI 19.8 to 27.5%) of WWT2D at the 12-month FU visit. Achievement of glycaemic targets was similar in women and men (59.3% vs. 61.1%). We found no sex differences in weight loss (6.9% vs. 6.8%), oSEMA maintenance dose, persistence rate (76.3% vs. 77.3%), or adverse events. : oSEMA was effective and safe in WWT2D in a real-world setting, with nearly one-third of patients reporting weight loss >10% and more than two-thirds achieving HbA1c < 7%. oSEMA showed no sex bias in terms of effectiveness and safety.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 40732973 ↗

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