Dulaglutide as add-on therapy to SGLT2 inhibitors in patients with inadequately controlled type 2 diabetes (AWARD-10): a 24-week, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT02597049. Findings Between Dec 7, 2015, and Feb 3, 2017, 424 patients were randomly assigned to dulaglutide 1·5 mg (n=142), dulaglutide 0·75 mg (n=142), and placebo (n=140). One patient in the dulaglutide 0·75 mg group was excluded from the analysis because they did not receive any dose of the study drug. The reduction in HbA1c concentration at 24 weeks was larger in patients receiving dulaglutide (least squares mean [LSM] for dulaglutide 1·5 mg −1·34% [SE 0·06] or −14·7 mmol/mol [0·6]; dulaglutide 0·75 mg −1·21% [0·06] or −13·2 mmol/mol [0·6]) than in patients receiving placebo (−0·54% [0·06] or −5·9 mmol/mol [0·6]; p<0·0001 for both groups vs placebo). The LSM differences were −0·79% (95% CI −0·97 to −0·61) or −8·6 mmol/mol (−10·6 to −6·7) for dulaglutide 1·5 mg and −0·66% (−0·84 to −0·49) or −7·2 mmol/mol (−9·2 to −5·4) for dulaglutide 0·75 mg (p<0·0001 for both). Serious adverse events were reported for five (4%) patients in the dulaglutide 1·5 mg group, three (2%) patients in the dulaglutide 0·75 mg group, and five (4%) patients in the placebo group. Treatment-emergent adverse events were more common in patients treated with dulaglutide than in patients who received placebo, mainly because of an increased incidence of gastrointestinal adverse events. Nausea (21 [15%] patients in the dulaglutide 1·5 mg group vs seven [5%] in th...
Source: The Lancet Diabetes and Endocrinology - Category: Endocrinology Source Type: research