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Efficacy and safety of cAMP signalling-biased GLP-1 analogue ecnoglutide monotherapy versus placebo in patients with type 2 diabetes (EECOH-1): a multi-centre, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 3 trial.

Nat Commun · 2026

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a 24-week study of 211 adults with type 2 diabetes, those given once-weekly ecnoglutide at doses of 0.6 mg or 1.2 mg saw greater improvements in blood sugar control compared to placebo. The average drop in blood sugar levels was 1.96% for the 0.6 mg dose and 2.43% for the 1.2 mg dose, compared to a 0.87% drop in the placebo group. The higher dose (1.2 mg) showed a larger benefit than the lower dose (0.6 mg).

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalNat Commun, 2026
Citations0
Molecules ecnoglutide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

Ecnoglutide is a cAMP-biased GLP-1 analogue developed for the treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and obesity. We conducted a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 3 trial to evaluate the efficacy and safety of ecnoglutide in adults with T2DM inadequately controlled with diet and exercise alone or with a single oral hypoglycaemic agent. The primary endpoint was change in glycated haemoglobin (HbA) from baseline at week 24. Between 29 December 2022 and 12 June 2024, 211 participants from 32 medical centres in China were randomised (2:2:1:1) to receive double-blind, once-weekly ecnoglutide (0.6 mg [n = 69] or 1.2 mg [n = 71]) or volume-matched placebo (0.6 mg [n = 36] or 1.2 mg [n = 35]) for 24 weeks. The randomisation, stratified by baseline HbA (≤8.5% or >8.5%), was conducted via an interactive web response system. Ecnoglutide and placebo were identical in appearance to achieve masking. The trial was completed. All randomised participants received ≥1 dose of the assigned treatment and thus were included for analyses. At week 24, the least squares mean changes from baseline in HbA were -1.96% (95% CI -2.18 to -1.73) with ecnoglutide 0.6 mg and -2.43% (95% CI -2.65 to -2.20) with ecnoglutide 1.2 mg versus -0.87% (-1.09 to -0.65) with placebo. The estimated treatment differences versus placebo were -1.09% (95% CI -1.40 to -0.77; p = 0.0003) with ecnoglutide 0.6 mg and -1.56% (95% CI -1.87 to -1.24; p < 0.0001) with ecnoglutide 1.2 mg. Ecnoglutide represents a potential monotherapy option for T2DM. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov with the registration number NCT05680155.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 41501026 ↗

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