Abstract
- When patients with type 2 diabetes fail to achieve strict HbA1c control with oral glucose-lowering drugs, insulin is the standard recourse. Exenatide, an injectable incretin analogue, should only be used when weight gain is a major problem.Liraglutide is another injectable incretin analogue recently authorised for use in this setting.
- Two randomised unblinded trials, one versus insulin glargine in 581 patients and the other versus exenatide in 464 patients, suggest that liraglutide has a slightly more potent effect on glycaemia. Weight loss was similar in the liraglutide and exenatide groups.
- In a trial including 1091 patients, liraglutide was not more or less effective than glimepiride on glycaemia.
- Like exenatide, liraglutide can cause pancreatitis. In the trial comparing liraglutide versus exenatide, one-quarter of patients experienced nausea.
- There is more evidence of a risk of thyroid cancer with liraglutide than with exenatide.
- Liraglutide is administered as a single daily subcutaneous injection, whereas exenatide requires two daily injections.
- In practice, when prescribing an incretin analogue seems justified, it is more prudent to continue using exenatide, while closely monitoring patients for adverse effects.
©Prescrire June 2010
"Liraglutide (type 2 diabetes. More prudent to continue using exenatide" Prescrire Int 2010; 19 (107): 109-112 (pdf, subscribers only).