| Literature DB >> 27350545 |
Amrita Ostawal1, Emina Mocevic2, Nana Kragh2, Weiwei Xu3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: In clinical trials, liraglutide has proven to be an effective drug for the treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). The real-world effectiveness of liraglutide has been investigated in numerous studies. The aim of this systematic literature review is to collate evidence on the real-world clinical effectiveness of liraglutide.Entities:
Keywords: Effectiveness; HbA1c; Hypoglycemia; Liraglutide; Literature review; Real-world evidence; Safety; Type 2 diabetes; Weight
Year: 2016 PMID: 27350545 PMCID: PMC5014786 DOI: 10.1007/s13300-016-0180-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes Ther Impact factor: 2.945
Study eligibility criteria
| Item | Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Population | Patients with T2DM | Type 1 diabetes mellitus Gestational diabetes Other diseases |
| Intervention | Treatment regimens including liraglutide | Insulin therapy NIADs |
| Comparator | Treatment regimens including NIADs TZD (e.g., pioglitazone) DPP-4i (e.g., sitagliptin or saxagliptin) SGLT2 inhibitor (e.g., dapagliflozin or canagliflozin) GLP-1 RA (e.g., exenatide, albiglutide, or dulaglutide) MET SU Other OADs | Insulin therapy |
| Outcomes | Clinical effectiveness and safety of liraglutide Comparative effectiveness and safety of liraglutide compared to other NIADs | Studies not reporting the clinical effectiveness/safety of either liraglutide compared to other NIADs |
| Study design | Chart review Medical record analysis Database analysis Expert panel studies Prospective follow-up studies Post-marketing surveillance studies | RCT Case-reports Letters to editor |
| Location | All | None |
| Language | All | None |
DPP-4i dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitor, GLP glucagon-like peptide, MET metformin, NIAD non-insulin antidiabetic drug, OAD oral antidiabetic drug, RA receptor agonist, RCT randomized controlled trials, SGLT2 sodium-glucose cotransporter type-2, SU sulfonylurea, T2DM type 2 diabetes mellitus, TZD thiazolidinedione
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram. No studies were excluded due to intervention/comparator at the full-text screening stage. Other sources include publications from different conference proceedings (see supplementary file 1). aPatients were solid organ transplant recipients or had other serious comorbidities. bResults were reported for overall glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist (no differentiation for liraglutide and exenatide); or data were unavailable in the full-text article. ti, ab title and abstract
Fig. 2Mean change in HbA1c from baseline in patients with T2DM on liraglutide treatment in a Europe (N = 21), b the USA (N = 4), and c Asia–Pacific (N = 13). a[11–25]. Note: data in the figures report findings from full-text publications (38 of the 43 articles that were included in the review). Data on HbA1c were not reported in five full-text publications. Numbers in parentheses on the x axis are references to the relevant publications. HbA1c glycated hemoglobin, T2DM type 2 diabetes mellitus
Fig. 3Mean reduction in weight from baseline in patients with T2DM on liraglutide treatment in a Europe (N = 16), b the USA (N = 1), and c Asia–Pacific (N = 11). a[11–25]. Note: data in the figure report findings from 28 full-text publications (28 of the 43 articles that were included in the review). Data on weight were not reported in 15 full-text publications. Numbers in parentheses on the x axis are references to the relevant publications. T2DM type 2 diabetes mellitus
Overview of studies reporting NICE Composite endpoint in real-world evidence studies
| Code | Intervention | Mean baseline HbA1c (SD), % |
| Follow-up duration (months) | NICE composite endpointb achieved |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Full-text publications | |||||
| Nyeland et al. 2015 [ | Liraglutide | 8.8 (1.9) | 287 | 6 | 25.10% |
| Sitagliptin | 8.6 (1.5) | 2781 | 10.4%a | ||
| Heymann et al. 2014 [ | Liraglutide | 9.7 (NA) | 1101 | 6 | 20.10% |
| Russo et al. 2015 [ | Liraglutide | 8.2 (1.3) | 115 | 12 | 47% |
| Evans et al. 2014 [ | Liraglutide | 9.6 (0.5) | 229 | 12 | 32% |
| Exenatide | 9.8 (0.8) | 148 | 24% | ||
| DPP-4i | 8.1 (0.4) | 710 | 64% | ||
| Evans et al. 2013 [ | Exenatide BID | 9.6 (0.5) | 148 | 12 | 3 months: 27% 6 months: 24% 9 months: 26% 12 months: 25% Audit end: 21% |
| Liraglutide | 9.8 (0.8) | 256 | 3 months: 35% 6 months: 32% 9 months: 31% 12 months: 29% Audit end: 28% | ||
| DPP-4i (sitagliptin, saxagliptin, or vildagliptin) | 8.1(0.4) | 710 | 3 months: 59% 6 months: 61% 9 months: 52% 12 months: 54% Audit end: 57% | ||
| Conference abstracts | |||||
| Heymann et al. 2013 [ | Liraglutide | 8.7 (1.3) | 453 | 6 | 20.10% |
| Karasik et al. 2013 [ | Liraglutide | 8.57 (1.20) | 614 | 6 | 16.90% |
| Fatima et al. 2014 [ | Liraglutide | 8.7 (NA) | 43 | 6 | 42% |
| Mattson et al. 2015 [ | Liraglutide | 7.69 (1.43) | 180 | 6 | 27% |
| Sitagliptin | 7.53 (1.50) | 208 | 10% | ||
BID twice daily, DPP-4i dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitor, HbA1c glycated hemoglobin, N number of patients, NA not available, NICE National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, SD standard deviation
a P < 0.001
bPercentage of patients with HbA1c reduction ≥1% and weight reduction ≥3%
Comparative effectiveness of liraglutide in patients with T2DM
| References |
| Follow-up (months) | Population | Study design | Treatment | Baseline HbA1c, mean% | Mean change in HbA1c from baseline,% | % patients achieving HbA1c <7% | Baseline weight, mean kg | Mean change in weight from baseline, kg |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DeKoven et al. 2014 [ | 234 | 6 | T2DM | Retrospective cohort | Liraglutide | 7.8% | −1.0% | 64.5% | NA | NA |
| 182 | Exenatide | 7.8% | −0.7% | 54.40% | NA | NA | ||||
| Ohki et al. 2012 [ | 26 | 18 | T2DM with NAFLD | Retrospective cohort | Liraglutide | 8.4% | −0.8% | NA | 81.8 kg | −3.8 kg |
| 36 | Sitagliptin | 8.4% | −1.1% | NA | 81.1 kg | −0.4 kg | ||||
| 20 | Pioglitazone | 7.7% | −0.8% | NA | 78.6 kg | 3.2 kg | ||||
| Nyeland et al. 2015 [ | 287 | 6 | T2DM | Retrospective database | Liraglutide | 8.8% | −0.9% | 29.3% | 114.3 kg | −3.78 kg |
| 2781 | Sitagliptin | 8.6% | −0.6%a | 22.8% | 95.4 kg | −1.12 kgb | ||||
| Evans et al. 2014 [ | 256 148 | 12 | T2DM | Retrospective cohort | Liraglutide | 9.6% | −1.23% | NA | 109.7 kg | −3.9 kg |
| Exenatide | 9.8% | −0.79%c | NA | 110.6 kg | −2.9 kg | |||||
| DPP-4i | 8.1% | −0.72%c | NA | 88.9 kg | −0.8 kgc | |||||
| Evans et al. 2013 [ | 256 | 12 | T2DM | Retrospective chart audit | Liraglutide | 9.8% | −1.28% | NA | 109.7 kg | −3.3 kg |
| 710 | DPP-4i | 8.1% | −0.7%c | NA | 88.9 kg | −0.7 kgc | ||||
| 148 | Exenatide | 9.6% | −0.7%c | NA | 110.6 kg | −2.5 kg | ||||
| 54 | DPP-4i to liraglutide | NR | −0.9%c | NA | NR | −2.5 kg | ||||
| NA | Exenatide to liraglutide | NR | −0.8% | NA | NR | −2.1 kg | ||||
| Chiefari et al. 2015 [ | 76 | 18 | T2DM | Retrospective cohort | Liraglutide | 8.1% | −1.4% | 51.3% | 73.5 kg | −4.00 kg |
| 103 | Glimepiride | 8.0% | −0.4%b | 11.6%b | 75 kg | no changeb | ||||
| Li et al. 2012 [ | 376 | 6 | T2DM | Retrospective cohort | Liraglutide | 7.9% | −0.95% | 52% | NA | NA |
| 1089 | Sitagliptin | 8.8% | −0.7%a | 44%a | NA | NA | ||||
| Thomsen et al. 2015 [ | 298 | 36 | T2DM | Retrospective database | Liraglutide | 7.9% | −1.3% | NA | NA | NA |
| 31 | Exenatide | NR | NR | NA | NA | NA | ||||
| 282 | Other GLD | 7.9% | −0.9% | NA | NA | NA | ||||
| 1262 | DPP-4i | 7.6% | −0.8% | NA | NA | NA | ||||
| 2484 | SU | 8.0% | −1.2% | NA | NA | NA |
DPP-4i dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitor, GLD glucose-lowering drug, HbA1c glycated hemoglobin, NA not available, NAFLD non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, N number of patients, NR not reported, SU sulfonylurea, T2DM type 2 diabetes mellitus
P values for liraglutide vs. active comparator: a P < 0.01; b P < 0.001; c P < 0.05
Occurrence of hypoglycemia
| References | Intervention (concomitant medication) | Follow-up duration |
| Hypoglycemic episodes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gautier et al. 2015 [ | Liraglutide (OADs) | 24 months | 3152 2 years: 2009 | 3 months: 7.4% 2 years: 4.4% |
| Toyoda et al. 2014 [ | Liraglutide (SU) | 6 months | 380 | 0.0% |
| Mori et al. 2011 [ | Liraglutide (OADs) | NA | 8 | % time in hypoglycemia (24-h) at pre-treatment: 0.1 (0.3)% |
| 0.3 mg | % time in hypoglycemia (24-h): 0.5 (1.7)% | |||
| 0.6 mg | % time in hypoglycemia (24-h): 0.1 (0.2)% | |||
| 0.9 mg | % time in hypoglycemia (24-h): 0.4 (1.3)% | |||
| Liraglutide only | 12 | % time in hypoglycemia (24-h): 0.0 (0.0)% | ||
| 0.3 mg | % time in hypoglycemia (24-h): 0.0 (0.1)% | |||
| 0.6 mg | % time in hypoglycemia (24-h): 0.0 (0.0)% | |||
| 0.9 mg | % time in hypoglycemia (24-h): 0.0 (0.0)% | |||
| Usui et al. 2013 [ | Liraglutide (SU) | 3 months | 147 | 0.0% |
| Li et al. 2014 [ | Liraglutide (OADs) | 6 months | 376 | Severe: 0.5% |
| Sitagliptin (OADs) | 1089 | Severe: 0.61% ( | ||
| Mezquita-Raya et al. 2015 [ | Liraglutide (OADs) | 6 months | 740 | All: 7.8% Severe: 0.0% Patients with insulin plus liraglutide: 10.6% Patients with secretagogues plus liraglutide: 15.2% ( Patients with MET plus liraglutide: 1.6% ( |
| Buysschaert et al. 2015 [ | Liraglutide (MET and SU) | 12 months | 245 | Minor: 0.07 to 0.55 events per patient per month Major: 1 event at 3 months |
| Kesavadev et al. 2012 [ | Liraglutide (OADs) | 6 months | 14 | 0.0% |
| Mulligan et al. 2013 [ | Liraglutide (SU; insulin) | 4 months | 193 | Minor: 5.7% (81.8% on concomitant SUs; 0.09% patients on basal insulin) |
| Chitnis et al. 2014 [ | Liraglutide only | 6 months | 3005 | 0.2–0.7% |
| Cotugno et al. 2015 [ | Liraglutide only | 12 months | 31 | 0.0% |
| Evans et al. 2014 [ | Liraglutide only | 12 months | 256 | Symptomatic: 0.8% |
| Exenatide | 148 | Symptomatic: 0.9% | ||
| DDP-4i | 710 | Symptomatic: 0.8% | ||
| Vitagliano et al. 2014 [ | BS | 12 months | 28 | Symptomatic reactive: 28.5% |
| Liraglutide only | 22 | 0.0% | ||
| Evans et al. 2013 [ | DPP-4i | 12 months | 710 | Symptomatic: 0.8% |
| Exenatide | 148 | Symptomatic: 0.9% | ||
| Liraglutide only | 256 | Symptomatic: 0.8% | ||
| Kaur et al. 2014 [ | Liraglutide (OADs) | 3 months | 196 | Minor: 3.0% |
| Lapolla et al. 2015 [ | Liraglutide (OADs) | 12 months | 481 | 5.0% |
| Chiefari et al. 2015 [ | Liraglutide (MET, MET plus insulin) | 18 months | 76 | Major: 0.0% Minor: 2.6% |
| Glimepiride | 103 | Major: 2.9%, Minor: 18.4%, |
DPP-4i dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitor, MET metformin, N number of patients, OAD oral antidiabetic drug, SU sulfonylurea
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