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Efficacy and safety of <scp>once‐weekly</scp> efpeglenatide in people with suboptimally controlled type 2 diabetes: The <scp>AMPLITUDE‐D</scp> , <scp>AMPLITUDE‐L</scp> and <scp>AMPLITUDE‐S</scp> randomized controlled trials

Vanita R. Aroda, Juan P. Frías, Linong Ji, Elisabeth Niemoeller, My‐Liên Nguyên‐Pascal, Karl Denkel, Melanie Espinasse, Hailing Guo, Seung Jae Baek, JaeDuk Choi, Ildiko Lingvay

2023Diabetes Obesity and Metabolism11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

AIM: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of once-weekly (QW) efpeglenatide in people with type 2 diabetes (T2D) suboptimally controlled with oral glucose-lowering drugs and/or basal insulin (BI). MATERIALS AND METHODS: Three phase 3, multicentre, randomized controlled trials compared the efficacy and safety of QW efpeglenatide versus dulaglutide when added to metformin (AMPLITUDE-D), efpeglenatide versus placebo when added to BI ± oral glucose-lowering drugs (AMPLITUDE-L) or metformin ± sulphonylurea (AMPLITUDE-S). All trials were terminated early by the sponsor because of funding rather than safety or efficacy concerns. RESULTS: In AMPLITUDE-D, non-inferiority of efpeglenatide to dulaglutide 1.5 mg was shown in HbA1c reduction from baseline to week 56, least squares mean treatment difference (95% CI): 4 mg, -0.03% (-0.20%, 0.14%)/-0.35 mmol/mol (-2.20, 1.49); 6 mg, -0.08% (-0.25%, 0.09%)/-0.90 mmol/mol (-2.76, 0.96). The reductions in body weight (approximately 3 kg) from baseline to week 56 were similar across all treatment groups. In AMPLITUDE-L and AMPLITUDE-S, numerically greater reduction in HbA1c and body weight were observed at all doses of efpeglenatide than placebo. American Diabetes Association level 2 hypoglycaemia (< 54 mg/dL [< 3.0 mmol/L]) was reported in few participants across all treatment groups (AMPLITUDE-D, ≤ 1%; AMPLITUDE-L, ≤ 10%; and AMPLITUDE-S, ≤ 4%). The adverse events profile was consistent with other glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs); gastrointestinal adverse events were most frequent in all three studies. CONCLUSIONS: In people with T2D suboptimally controlled with oral glucose-lowering drugs and/or BI, QW efpeglenatide was non-inferior to dulaglutide in terms of HbA1c reduction and showed numerically greater improvements than placebo in glycaemic control and body weight, with safety consistent with the GLP-1 RA class.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineAdverse effectDulaglutidePlaceboMetforminDiabetes mellitusInternal medicineType 2 diabetesRandomized controlled trialEndocrinologyGastroenterologyPharmacologyExenatidePathologyAlternative medicineDiabetes Treatment and ManagementDiabetes, Cardiovascular Risks, and LipoproteinsDiabetes Management and Research
Efficacy and safety of <scp>once‐weekly</scp> efpeglenatide in people with suboptimally controlled type 2 diabetes: The <scp>AMPLITUDE‐D</scp> , <scp>AMPLITUDE‐L</scp> and <scp>AMPLITUDE‐S</scp> randomized controlled trials | Litcius