GLPwatch

Feasibility of Once/Daily Administered GLP/1 Receptoragonist (Lixisenatide) in Combination With Basal Insulin

NCT02168491 · Completed

Last updated 2026-05-28

This clinical trial tested whether a daily injectable medication called lixisenatide, when combined with long-acting insulin, could help lower blood sugar levels in adults with type 2 diabetes.

Status Completed The study has finished.
Phase Phase 3 Confirms effectiveness in a large group before approval.
Type Interventional (clinical trial)
Design open-label (no blinding) treatment study
Participants 10 people
Who can join Ages 18–70 · all sexes
Timeline Started 2014-11 · est. completion 2015-08
Where 1 site · Austria

What this study is testing ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02168491 ↗

Description as written by the study sponsor.

Premixed insulin-based therapy is a standard insulin treatment strategy in Austria. The widespread use of premixed insulin is explained by high acceptance by health care professionals and patients due to one single product and flexible number of injections (1-3 daily) which covers the demand in controlling fasting and postprandial glucose excursions of most patients with diabetes. However, the use of pre-mixed insulin frequently leads to a high insulin demand and consequently weight gain and an increased risk of hypoglycemia. Hence, achieve good metabolic control in these patients remains a major challenge. For those patients, the approach to treatment intensification without facing the typical risks of insulin treatment (hypoglycemia and weight increase) is of major importance. One, so far not exploited option may be the BIT-strategy: Basal insulin in combination with incretin-based therapy. Pathophysiologically basal insulin inhibits glucose production in the liver, decreases hepatic insulin resistance and improves the function of beta cells in the postprandial state by discharge of fasting insulin secretion. During further diabetes progression steadily increasing HbA1c levels - despite good fasting blood glucose control - indicate the need for additional intervention of meal-related glucose excursions. In this stage of type-2 diabetes basal insulin can be combined with prandial (short-acting) insulin or prandial GLP-1 receptor agonists. However, regarding important safety parameters: risks of hypoglycemia and weight gain in the long-term treatment GLP-1 receptor agonists are beneficial. Lixisenatide is a novel GLP-1 receptor agonist with a pronounced postprandial (PPG) effect which fits with basal insulin mode of action primarily focused on fasting blood glucose reduction. Therefore 10 patients (both gender) under treatment with premixed insulin (2-3 times daily) and HbA1c\>7% will be switched to basal insulin glargine (Lantus, once daily) and GLP-1 receptor agonist Lixisenatide (Lyxumia, once daily). The investigators hypothesize that switching from a therapy based on premixed insulin to a simple, once daily administered combination of basal insulin plus a GLP-1 receptor agonist in patients with type-2 diabetes not achieving therapeutic target (HbA1c\>7%) is clinically feasable in an out patient setting

Treatments tested

Main thing measuredChange in HbA1c From Baseline to End
SponsorMedical University of Vienna
Conditions studiedType 2 Diabetes Mellitus
GLP-1 drugs lixisenatide

Full protocol, eligibility, and contacts on ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02168491 ↗