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Advancing Basal Insulin Replacement in Type 2 Diabetes Inadequately Controlled With Insulin Glargine Plus Oral Agents: A Comparison of Adding Albiglutide, a Weekly GLP-1 Receptor Agonist, Versus Thrice-Daily Prandial Insulin Lispro
Improving long-acting insulin treatment in type 2 diabetes not well controlled with insulin glargine and pills: comparing adding weekly albiglutide versus three-times-daily mealtime insulin lispro
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Abstract
At week 26, HbA1c decreased by -0.82% with albiglutide compared to -0.66% with lispro.
- Albiglutide resulted in a treatment difference of -0.16% in HbA1c change compared to lispro, meeting noninferiority criteria.
- Weight decreased with albiglutide while it increased with lispro, showing a difference of -0.73 kg versus +0.81 kg.
- The mean daily dose of insulin glargine increased for both treatments but was slightly higher with albiglutide.
- Severe hypoglycemia was absent with albiglutide, while it occurred in two patients using lispro.
- Albiglutide was associated with lower rates of documented symptomatic hypoglycemia and gastrointestinal side effects compared to lispro.
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