Exenatide Inpatient Trial: A Randomized Controlled Pilot Trial on the Safety and Efficacy of Exenatide (Byetta®) Therapy for the Inpatient Management of Patients With Type 2 Diabetes
NCT02455076 · Completed
Last updated 2026-05-28This clinical trial tested the safety and effectiveness of the medication exenatide (Byetta®) in hospitalized adults with type 2 diabetes to see how it affects their blood sugar levels.
What this study is testing ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02455076 ↗
Description as written by the study sponsor.
The purpose of this study is to try and achieve similar glycemic control in general non-Intensive Care Unit (non-ICU) patients with Type 2 Diabetes with exenatide alone or in combination with basal insulin as compared to treatment with basal bolus insulin alone. The association between hyperglycemia and poor clinical outcomes in patients with diabetes is well established. Previous studies have shown that basal bolus insulin regimens improve glycemic control and reduce the rate of hospital complications compared to sliding scale regular insulin (SSRI) therapy, but has a significant risk of hypoglycemia. The investigators will compare the efficacy and safety of exenatide alone or in combination with basal insulin to control high blood glucose levels resulting in a lower risk of hypoglycemia.
Treatments tested
- Exenatide also known as Byetta Drug
Exenatide is dispensed via a 1.2 mL prefilled pen with 250 mcg/mL solution for subcutaneous (s.c.) injection and will be administered twice daily starting at 5 mcg per dose, either in the abdomen, thigh or upper arm. Exenatide injections will be given within 60 minutes prior to morning and evening meals (or before the two main meals of the day, approximately 6 hours or more apart between doses). The exenatide dose will be increased to 10 mcg twice daily after 1 month based on clinical response.
- Glargine also known as Lantus Drug
Glargine will be given once daily, at the same time of day. If the BG is between 140-200 mg/dL, the dose will be 0.2 units/kg/day; for BG levels 201-400 mg/dL, the dose will be 0.25 units/kg/day. The patients will be discharged on glargine once daily at 50% of the hospital dose.The total daily dose (TDD) of glargine is based on the patient's fasting BG levels for the last 2 days. 1. FBG \>180 mg/dL, no hypoglycemia; glargine increased by 4 IU. 2. FBG \>140 mg/dL, no hypoglycemia; glargine increased by 2 IU. 3. FBG 100-140 mg/dL, no hypoglycemia; no change in dosage. 4. FBG 70 - 99 mg/dl, decrease glargine by 4 IU or 10% of TDD. 5. FBG or RBG \< 70 mg/dl, decrease glargine by 8 IU or 20% of TDD. 6. FBG or RBG \< 40 mg/dl, decrease dose of glargine by 30%.
- Rapid-acting insulin analogs Drug
If the BG levels are \>140 mg/dL, rapid acting insulin analogs will be administered following the "supplemental/sliding scale" protocol. If a patient is able and expected to eat all or most of his/her meals, supplemental insulin will be administered before each meal and at bedtime following the "usual" dose of the sliding scale protocol. If a patient is not able to eat, supplemental insulin will be administered every 6 hours following the "sensitive" dose of the sliding scale. If the BG is 141-180 mg/dL, then 2,3 or 4 units of insulin will be given; for BG 181 - 220 mg/dL; the units of insulin will be 3, 4 or 6; for BG 221 - 260 mg/dL, the units of insulin will be 4,5 or 8; for BG 261 - 300 mg/dL, the units of insulin will be 5, 6 or 10; for BG 301 - 350, the insulin will be 6, 8 or 12 units; for BG 351 - 400 mg/dL, the units of insulin will be 7,10 or 14; for BG\> 400 mg/dL, the insulin will be 8,12 or 16 units.
| Main thing measured | Mean Daily Blood Glucose Concentration Inpatient |
|---|---|
| Sponsor | Emory University |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
| GLP-1 drugs | exenatide |
Full protocol, eligibility, and contacts on ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02455076 ↗