Photo by Dennis Klicker on Unsplash
Photo by Dennis Klicker on Unsplash

New once-a-week insulin injection could be as effective as daily insulin injections for type 1 and 2 diabetes

Embargoed until: Publicly released:
Peer-reviewed: This work was reviewed and scrutinised by relevant independent experts.

Randomised controlled trial: Subjects are randomly assigned to a test group, which receives the treatment, or a control group, which commonly receives a placebo. In 'blind' trials, participants do not know which group they are in; in ‘double blind’ trials, the experimenters do not know either. Blinding trials helps removes bias.

People: This is a study based on research using people.

New once-a-week insulin injections could be as effective as daily insulin injections for people with type 1 and 2 diabetes, according to two papers being published in NEJM and the Lancet, and being presented at the Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD). In both studies, the researchers compared a new insulin called insulin efsitora alfa (efsitora), which is designed to be injected once per week, with insulin degludec (a standard insulin) in randomly assigned adult patients over 52 weeks with either type 1 or type 2 diabetes. The results of the studies found that the weekly efsitora injections were about as effective as daily degludec injections for blood sugar control. The authors say that once-weekly insulin has the potential to simplify dose administration and diminish barriers to starting insulin therapy by reducing the injection burden as compared with a once-daily insulin.

Journal/conference: European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD)

Research: Paper

Organisation/s: MultiCare Rockwood Center for Diabetes and Endocrinology, USA

Funder: See individual papers for specific funding information.

Media release

From: European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD)

New research shows new class of once-weekly insulin as effective as daily injections for patients with type 2 diabetes

New research published in NEJM and presented at this year’s Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) in Madrid (9-13 Sept) shows that a new class of insulin that is injected once a week is as effective as daily insulin injections for effective and safe blood sugar management in patients with type 2 diabetes. The study is by Dr Carol Wysham, MultiCare Rockwood Center for Diabetes and Endocrinology, Spokane, WA, USA, and colleagues.

When patients with type 2 diabetes find their oral medications alone can no longer control their blood sugar, insulin therapy is added and injection frequency (having daily injections) is among the main factors that can contribute to failures in treatment adherence (others include worry about weight gain and having hypoglycaemic episodes or ‘hypos’).

Insulin efsitora alfa (efsitora) is a new basal insulin designed for once-weekly administration. Clinical data to date on safety and efficacy have been limited to small phase 1 or phase 2 trials. In this new phase 3 study, the efficacy of once-weekly efsitora was compared to daily injections of insulin degludec (a standard insulin) in adult patients that had not yet begun insulin therapy (on multiple oral diabetes medications but still were not at their glycaemic goals).

The authors conducted a 52-week study in which participants were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to receive efsitora or degludec. The primary end point was the change in the glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c – a measure of blood sugar control) level from baseline to week 52; they hypothesised that efsitora would be noninferior to degludec (non-inferiority margin, 0.4%). Secondary and safety end points included the change in the glycated haemoglobin level in subgroups of participants using and not using the relatively new glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist antidiabetic medications, the percentage of time that the glucose level was in the target range of 70 to 180 mg per decilitre in weeks 48 through 52, and hypoglycaemic episodes.

A total of 928 participants were randomly assigned to efsitora (466) or degludec (462). The mean glycated hemoglobin level decreased from 8.21% at baseline to 6.97% (absolute change 1.26%) at week 52 with efsitora and from 8.24% to 7.05% (absolute change -1.17%) with degludec; a statistically significant treatment difference of 0.09% that demonstrated non-inferior reduction of Hb1Ac between efsitora and degludec.

Efsitora was also noninferior to degludec with respect to the change in the glycated haemoglobin level in participants using and not using GLP-1 receptor agonists. The percentage of time that the glucose level was within the target range was 64.3% with efsitora and 61.2% with degludec (estimated treatment difference, 3.1 percentage points; statistically significant). The rate of combined clinically significant or severe hypoglycaemia was 0.58 events per participant-year of exposure with efsitora and 0.45 events per participant-year of exposure with degludec, but this finding was not statistically significant. No severe hypoglycaemia was reported with efsitora; six episodes were reported with degludec. The incidence of adverse events was similar in the two groups.

The authors say: “In adults with type 2 diabetes who had not previously received insulin, once-weekly efsitora was noninferior to once-daily degludec in controlling high blood sugar by reducing glycated haemoglobin levels.”

They add: “A once-weekly insulin has the potential to simplify dose administration and diminish barriers to starting insulin therapy by means of a reduction in injection burden as compared with a once-daily insulin. A recent study evaluating preferences for a once-weekly basal insulin in adults with type 2 diabetes indicated that both patients and providers would prefer once-weekly basal insulin over current basal insulin preparations.”

On GLP-1 agonists, they add: “Given treatment guidelines and recommendations to incorporate GLP-1 receptor agonists earlier in treatment, along with their growing use worldwide, it is relevant to show that efsitora can be effectively and safely added to such therapy. Here, efsitora showed noninferiority to degludec with respect to the change in the glycated haemoglobin level among participants using and not using GLP-1 receptor agonists, without substantial treatment differences in hypoglycaemia between subgroups.”

News for:

International

Media contact details for this story are only visible to registered journalists.