Efficacy and safety of lixisenatide once daily versus exenatide twice daily in type 2 diabetes inadequately controlled on metformin: a 24-week, randomized, open-label, active-controlled study (GetGoal-X).
Diabetes Care · 2013
Last updated 2026-05-28In a 24-week study of 634 adults with type 2 diabetes not well-controlled on metformin, lixisenatide taken once daily was found to be similarly effective as exenatide taken twice daily at lowering blood sugar levels. Both drugs led to weight loss, but lixisenatide caused fewer side effects like nausea and low blood sugar compared to exenatide.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Diabetes Care, 2013 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 208 |
| Relative citation ratio | 6.81 |
| NIH percentile | 95 |
| Molecules | exenatide, lixisenatide |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To compare efficacy and safety of lixisenatide once daily versus exenatide twice daily in type 2 diabetes inadequately controlled with metformin.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Adults with diabetes inadequately controlled (HbA1c 7-10%) with metformin were randomized to lixisenatide 20 μg once daily (n=318) or exenatide 10 μg twice daily (n=316) in a 24-week (main period), open-label, parallel-group, multicenter study. The primary objective was a noninferiority assessment of lixisenatide versus exenatide in HbA1c change from baseline to week 24.
RESULTS: Lixisenatide once daily demonstrated noninferiority in HbA1c reduction versus exenatide twice daily. The least squares mean change was -0.79% (mean decrease 7.97 to 7.17%) for lixisenatide versus -0.96% (mean decrease 7.96 to 7.01%) for exenatide, and treatment difference was 0.17% (95% CI, 0.033-0.297), meeting a predefined noninferiority upper CI margin of 0.4%. Responder rate (HbA1c<7.0%) and improvements in fasting plasma glucose were comparable. Both agents induced weight loss (from 94.5 to 91.7 kg and from 96.7 to 92.9 kg with lixisenatide and exenatide, respectively). Incidence of adverse events (AEs) was similar for lixisenatide and exenatide, as was incidence of serious AEs (2.8 and 2.2%, respectively). Discontinuations attributable to AEs occurred in 33 lixisenatide (10.4%) and 41 exenatide (13.0%) patients. In the lixisenatide group, fewer participants experienced symptomatic hypoglycemia (2.5 vs. 7.9%; P<0.05), with fewer gastrointestinal events (especially nausea; 24.5 vs. 35.1%; P<0.05).
CONCLUSIONS: Add-on lixisenatide once daily in type 2 diabetes inadequately controlled with metformin demonstrated noninferior improvements in HbA1c, with slightly lower mean weight loss, lower incidence of hypoglycemia, and better gastrointestinal tolerability compared with exenatide twice daily.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 23698396 ↗
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