SummaryAimsThe study aims to examine real‐world weight change and the role of medication adherence among patients with type 2 diabetes who initiated one of three drug classes: glucagon‐like peptide‐1 receptor agonist (GLP‐1RA), dipeptidyl peptidase‐4 inhibitor (DPP4) and sulfonylureas (SUs).Materials and methodsA cohort of patients initiating one of the three drug classes was selected from a large US database of integrated electronic medical record and administrative claims. Adherence was defined as per cent of days covered ≥80% during the year following drug initiation. Weight change was calculated from drug initiation (−180, +30 d) to 1 year (±90 d) later. Multivariate regression controlled for baseline differences between adherent and poorly adherent patients and the addition of another drug class during follow‐up.ResultsThe study included 833 GLP‐1RA, 2,272 DPP4 and 2,713 SU patients who contributed 2,279, 6,602 and 7,429 observations respectively. Patients initiating a GLP‐1RA achieved the largest weight change (−2.46 kg of GLP‐1RA, −1.26 kg of DPP4 and 0.18 kg of SU, P < 0.01). Adherent GLP‐1 patients lost 1.73 kg more than poorly adherent patients, and adherent SU patients gained 1.11 kg more than poorly adherent patients (all P < 0.01). Adherent and poorly adherent DPP4 patients experienced approximately the same amount of weight loss.ConclusionsMedication adherence can mediate observed weight loss in patients treated with a GLP1‐RA or weight gain in those treated with an SU. Medication adherence was low in a real‐world population, particularly for GLP‐1RA, which displayed the strongest weight loss benefit. Because recent American Diabetes Association guidelines recommend selecting drug therapies that have a weight loss or weight neutral effect for the management of type 2 diabetes patients, patients should be encouraged to enhance their adherence to benefit the most from therapies that have weight loss properties.
Introduction: This analysis evaluated the efficacy and safety of dulaglutide in Chinese patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D) aged C 60 and \ 60 years. Methods: This post hoc analysis included patients with T2D enrolled in two phase 3 clinical trials AWARD-CHN1 (NCT01644500) and AWARD-CHN2 (NCT01648582) of dulaglutide 0.75 and 1.5 mg. Patients were Digital Features To view digital features for this article go to
Introduction: In the randomized, open-label, parallel-arm, active-controlled phase III AWARD-CHN2 trial, once-weekly dulaglutide plus concomitant oral antihyperglycemic medications (OAMs) improved HbA1c over 26 weeks compared with once-daily insulin glargine in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). This post-hoc subgroup analysis of AWARD-CHN2 investigated the pancreatic safety of dulaglutide in Chinese patients with T2DM, stratified by potential influencing factors. Methods: Changes in pancreatic enzyme (pancreatic amylase, total amylase, and lipase) levels
Highlights
In Chinese patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D) and body mass index (BMI) <25 kg/m2, dulaglutide demonstrated great improvements in glycemic control with mild body weight reduction and low hypoglycemia risk.
The results indicate that dulaglutide is effective and safe in patients with T2D and lower BMI; therefore, BMI should not be a consideration when dulaglutide is prescribed to Chinese patients with T2D.
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