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Safety, tolerability and sustained weight loss over 2 years with the once-daily human GLP-1 analog, liraglutide.

Int J Obes (Lond) · 2012

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a 2-year study of 564 adults with obesity, those taking the highest dose of liraglutide (3.0 mg) lost 5.8 kg more weight than those on placebo after the first year. By the end of 2 years, participants on liraglutide 2.4 or 3.0 mg maintained 3.0 kg more weight loss than those on orlistat. The most common side effects were mild nausea and vomiting, and the drug also reduced rates of prediabetes and metabolic syndrome by 52% and 59%, respectively.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalInt J Obes (Lond), 2012
Citations503
Relative citation ratio16.19
NIH percentile99
Molecules liraglutide
Conditions studied Obesity

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Having demonstrated short-term weight loss with liraglutide in this group of obese adults, we now evaluate safety/tolerability (primary outcome) and long-term efficacy for sustaining weight loss (secondary outcome) over 2 years. DESIGN: A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled 20-week study with 2-year extension (sponsor unblinded at 20 weeks, participants/investigators at 1 year) in 19 European clinical research centers. SUBJECTS: A total of 564 adults (n=90-98 per group; body mass index 30-40 kg m(-2)) enrolled, 398 entered the extension and 268 completed the 2-year trial. Participants received diet (500 kcal deficit per day) and exercise counseling during 2-week run-in, before being randomly assigned (with a telephone or web-based system) to once-daily subcutaneous liraglutide (1.2, 1.8, 2.4 or 3.0 mg, n=90-95), placebo (n=98) or open-label orlistat (120 mg × 3, n=95). After 1 year, liraglutide/placebo recipients switched to liraglutide 2.4 mg, then 3.0 mg (based on 20-week and 1-year results, respectively). The trial ran from January 2007-April 2009 and is registered with Clinicaltrials.gov, number NCT00480909. RESULTS: From randomization to year 1, liraglutide 3.0 mg recipients lost 5.8 kg (95% confidence interval 3.7-8.0) more weight than those on placebo and 3.8 kg (1.6-6.0) more than those on orlistat (P0.0001; intention-to-treat, last-observation-carried-forward). At year 2, participants on liraglutide 2.4/3.0 mg for the full 2 years (pooled group, n=184) lost 3.0 kg (1.3-4.7) more weight than those on orlistat (n=95; P<0.001). Completers on liraglutide 2.4/3.0 mg (n=92) maintained a 2-year weight loss of 7.8 kg from screening. With liraglutide 3.0 mg, 20-week body fat decreased by 15.4% and lean tissue by 2.0%. The most frequent drug-related side effects were mild to moderate, transient nausea and vomiting. With liraglutide 2.4/3.0 mg, the 2-year prevalence of prediabetes and metabolic syndrome decreased by 52 and 59%, with improvements in blood pressure and lipids. CONCLUSION: Liraglutide is well tolerated, sustains weight loss over 2 years and improves cardiovascular risk factors.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 21844879 ↗

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