1.
Real-world clinical outcomes and predictors of glycaemic and weight response to exenatide once weekly in patients with type 2 diabetes: The CIBELES project.
Gorgojo-Martínez, JJ, Gargallo-Fernández, MA, Brito-Sanfiel, M, Lisbona-Catalán, A
International journal of clinical practice. 2018;(3):e13055
Abstract
AIMS: To evaluate in a real-world setting the effectiveness of exenatide once-weekly (ExQW) in patients with T2D and to determine predictors of glycaemic and weight response to this drug at 6 months. METHODS Observational, retrospective, multicenter study in adult patients with T2D and BMI ≥30 kg/m2 from 4 tertiary Spanish hospitals who started ExQW therapy at least 6 months before the inclusion and had not achieved adequate glycaemic control on oral therapies or other GLP-1 receptor agonists. Glycaemic response was defined as an A1C reduction ≥1.0% and weight response as a weight loss ≥3% 6 months after ExQW. The best predictive models of glycaemic and weight response were estimated by binary logistic regression. RESULTS One hundred and forty eight patients were included, mean age 58.0 years, A1C 7.7%, weight 105.9 kg and BMI 38.4 kg/m2 . A1C (-1.1%), weight (-3.9 kg), systolic blood pressure (-4.0 mm Hg), diastolic blood pressure (-2.9 mm Hg), LDL-cholesterol (-14.2 mg/dL) and triglycerides (-31.0 mg/dL) significantly decreased 6 months after ExQW. 41.5% of patients had an A1C reduction ≥1.0% and 53.1% lost ≥3% of baseline weight. Glycaemic and weight reductions were sustained in patients completing 1 and 2 years of follow-up. The best predictive model of glycaemic response only included higher A1C levels (OR 3.9), whereas higher BMI (OR 1.1) and prior DPP-4i therapy (OR 3.1) were associated to weight response in the multivariate analysis. CONCLUSIONS In a real-world setting, ExQW significantly decreased A1C, weight, blood pressure and lipids at 6 months. Our study identified higher baseline A1C as the sole independent predictor of glycaemic response to ExQW and higher BMI and previous DDP4i treatment as predictive factors of meaningful weight response.
2.
Substitution of insulin by exenatide in bad controlled type 2 diabetic patients: efficacy and predictive factors.
Barthélémy, M, Boullu Sanchis, S, Moreau, F, Reix, N, Pinget, M, Sigrist, S, Jeandidier, N
Minerva endocrinologica. 2015;(3):155-61
Abstract
AIM: Exenatide therapy is indicated in type 2 diabetes after failure of oral antidiabetic agents (OAD). The aim of this observational prospective study was to assess efficacy of exenatide, in improving HbA1c of at least of 1% (responders) in type 2 diabetic patients treated previously with insulin. METHODS Thirty-six patients (HbA1c >7.5%), with chronic bad glycemic control, were hospitalized to improve glycemia using transient continuous insulin infusion followed by administration of exenatide and OAD agents. In these patients, insulin had been introduced previously because of OAD failure without any sign of severe insulin deficiency. RESULTS On the 27 patients analyzed at 3 months, 19 patients were responders (HbA1c: M0: 9.9±1.7%; M3: 7.6±1.2%). Among the 8 non-responders, only 4 deteriorated their HbA1c. After 9 months, 10 patients remained Responders (HbA1c: 7±0.9%). Predictive factors for an improvement of glycemic control were: diabetes duration shorter than 12 years, ratio fasting glycemia/C-peptide less than 1, fasting C-peptide higher than 2.0 µg/L and mean capillary blood glucose after 3 days of exenatide lower than 200 mg/dL. These criteria remained valid in case of a high HbA1c at baseline. CONCLUSION In patients with no signs of insulin dependence and in case of insulin failure, exenatide associated to OAD may be tried in order to improve glycemic control, this objective was reached by 70% of our patients. Predictive factors for good response, easily available in clinical practice, may help therapeutic choices.