Litcius/Paper detail

Tirzepatide Improved Markers of Islet Cell Function and Insulin Sensitivity in People With T2D (SURPASS-2)

Juan P. Frías, Christophe De Block, Katelyn Brown, Hui Wang, Melissa K. Thomas, Meltem Zeytinoglu, Juan M. Maldonado

2024The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

CONTEXT: In previous SURPASS studies tirzepatide reduced hemoglobin glycated A1c (HbA1c) and body weight and improved markers of insulin sensitivity and β-cell function to a greater extent than comparators. OBJECTIVE: Explore changes in biomarkers of β-cell function and insulin sensitivity and in efficacy profiles in baseline biomarker quartile analyses with tirzepatide compared to semaglutide. DESIGN: Post hoc analysis of SURPASS-2 phase 3 trial (participants randomly assigned to receive weekly subcutaneous tirzepatide or semaglutide for 40 weeks). SETTING: Post hoc analysis of 128 sites in 8 countries. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 1879 participants with type 2 diabetes. INTERVENTIONS: Once-weekly tirzepatide (5, 10, 15 mg) or semaglutide 1 mg. MAIN OUTCOMES MEASURES: Change in homeostatic model assessment indices for pancreatic β-cell function (HOMA2-B) and for insulin resistance (HOMA2-IR), fasting glucagon, fasting C-peptide, and fasting insulin. RESULTS: At week 40, a greater increase in HOMA2-B was seen with tirzepatide (5, 10, 15 mg) doses (96.9-120.4%) than with semaglutide 1 mg (84.0%) (P < .05). There was a greater reduction in HOMA2-IR with all doses of tirzepatide (15.5%-24.0%) than with semaglutide 1 mg (5.1%) (P < .05). Tirzepatide 10 and 15 mg resulted in a significant reduction in both fasting C-peptide (5.2%-6.0%) and fasting glucagon (53.0%-55.3%) compared with an increase of C-peptide (3.3%) and a reduction of glucagon (47.7%) with semaglutide 1 mg (P < .05). HbA1c and body weight reductions were greater with all tirzepatide doses than semaglutide within each HOMA2-B and HOMA2-IR baseline quartile. CONCLUSION: In this post hoc analysis, improvements in HbA1c and weight loss were consistent and significantly higher with tirzepatide, regardless of baseline β-cell function and insulin resistance, compared with semaglutide.

Topics & Concepts

IsletInsulin sensitivityEndocrinologyInternal medicineFunction (biology)Type 2 diabetesSensitivity (control systems)InsulinMedicineInsulin resistanceDiabetes mellitusBiologyCell biologyEngineeringElectronic engineeringDiabetes Treatment and ManagementPancreatic function and diabetesDiabetes and associated disorders