One year of liraglutide treatment offers sustained and more effective glycaemic control and weight reduction compared with sitagliptin, both in combination with metformin, in patients with type 2 diabetes: a randomised, parallel-group, open-label trial.
Int J Clin Pract · 2011
Last updated 2026-05-28In a year-long study of people with type 2 diabetes already taking metformin, those who added liraglutide (either 1.2 mg or 1.8 mg per day) saw better blood sugar control and more weight loss than those who added sitagliptin (100 mg per day). Blood sugar levels dropped by 1.29% and 1.51% with liraglutide, compared to 0.88% with sitagliptin, and participants lost 2.78 kg or 3.68 kg with liraglutide versus 1.16 kg with sitagliptin.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Int J Clin Pract, 2011 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 202 |
| Relative citation ratio | 6.47 |
| NIH percentile | 95 |
| Molecules | liraglutide |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes, Obesity |
Abstract
AIM: The aim of this study was to compare the efficacy and safety of once-daily human glucagon-like peptide-1 analogue liraglutide with dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitor sitagliptin, each added to metformin, over 52 weeks in individuals with type 2 diabetes.
METHODS: In an open-label, parallel-group trial, metformin-treated participants were randomised to liraglutide 1.2 mg/day (n=225), liraglutide 1.8 mg/day (n=221) or sitagliptin 100 mg/day (n=219) for 26 weeks (main phase). Participants continued the same treatment in a 26-week extension.
RESULTS: Liraglutide (1.2 or 1.8 mg) was superior to sitagliptin for reducing HbA(1c) from baseline (8.4-8.5%) to 52 weeks: -1.29% and -1.51% vs. -0.88% respectively. Estimated mean treatment differences between liraglutide and sitagliptin were as follows: -0.40% (95% confidence interval -0.59 to -0.22) for 1.2 mg and -0.63% (-0.81 to -0.44) for 1.8 mg (both p<0.0001). Weight loss was greater with liraglutide 1.2 mg (-2.78 kg) and 1.8 mg (-3.68 kg) than sitagliptin (-1.16 kg) (both p<0.0001). Diabetes Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire scores increased significantly more with liraglutide 1.8 mg than with sitagliptin (p=0.03). Proportions of participants reporting adverse events were generally comparable; minor hypoglycaemia was 8.1%, 8.3% and 6.4% for liraglutide 1.2 mg, 1.8 mg and sitagliptin respectively. Gastrointestinal side effects, mainly nausea, initially occurred more frequently with liraglutide, but declined after several weeks.
CONCLUSION: Liraglutide provides greater sustained glycaemic control and body weight reduction over 52 weeks. Treatment satisfaction was significantly greater with 1.8 mg liraglutide, similar to 26-week results. The safety profiles of liraglutide and sitagliptin are consistent with previous reports.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 21355967 ↗
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