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Published in: Diabetologia 2/2016

Open Access 01-02-2016 | Article

Efficacy and safety of once-weekly GLP-1 receptor agonist albiglutide (HARMONY 2): 52 week primary endpoint results from a randomised, placebo-controlled trial in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus inadequately controlled with diet and exercise

Authors: Michael A. Nauck, Murray W. Stewart, Christopher Perkins, Angela Jones-Leone, Fred Yang, Caroline Perry, Rickey R. Reinhardt, Marc Rendell

Published in: Diabetologia | Issue 2/2016

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Abstract

Aims/hypothesis

Additional safe and effective therapies for type 2 diabetes are needed, especially ones that do not cause weight gain and have a low risk of hypoglycaemia. The present study evaluated albiglutide as monotherapy.

Methods

In this placebo-controlled study, 309 patients (aged ≥18 years) with type 2 diabetes inadequately controlled by diet and exercise and who were not using a glucose-lowering agent (HbA1c 7.0–10.0% [53.00–85.79 mmol/mol], body mass index 20–45 kg/m2, and fasting C-peptide ≥0.26 nmol/l) were randomised (1:1:1 on a fixed randomisation schedule using an interactive voice response system) to receive once-weekly albiglutide 30 mg (n = 102) or 50 mg (n = 102) or matching placebo (n = 105). The study treatments were blinded to both patients and study personnel. All study data were collected at individual patient clinic visits. The primary efficacy endpoint was change in HbA1c from baseline to week 52. The primary analysis was applied to the intent-to-treat population. Additional efficacy and safety endpoints were assessed.

Results

At week 52, both albiglutide 30 mg and 50 mg were superior to placebo in reducing HbA1c. The least-squares means treatment difference from placebo was −0.84% (95% CI −1.11%, −0.58%; p < 0.0001) with albiglutide 30 mg and −1.04% (−1.31%, −0.77%; p < 0.0001) with albiglutide 50 mg. Injection-site reactions were reported more frequently with albiglutide (30 mg: 17.8%; 50 mg: 22.2%) than with placebo (9.9%). Other commonly reported adverse events included nausea, diarrhoea, vomiting and hypoglycaemia; the incidences of these were generally similar across treatment groups.

Conclusions/interpretation

Albiglutide is safe and effective as monotherapy and significantly lowered HbA1c levels over 52 weeks, did not cause weight gain, and had good gastrointestinal tolerability and a low rate of hypoglycaemia compared with placebo.
Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00849017
Funding This study was sponsored by GlaxoSmithKline.
Appendix
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Metadata
Title
Efficacy and safety of once-weekly GLP-1 receptor agonist albiglutide (HARMONY 2): 52 week primary endpoint results from a randomised, placebo-controlled trial in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus inadequately controlled with diet and exercise
Authors
Michael A. Nauck
Murray W. Stewart
Christopher Perkins
Angela Jones-Leone
Fred Yang
Caroline Perry
Rickey R. Reinhardt
Marc Rendell
Publication date
01-02-2016
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Diabetologia / Issue 2/2016
Print ISSN: 0012-186X
Electronic ISSN: 1432-0428
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00125-015-3795-1

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