Abstract

Aims/hypothesisThe aim of this study was to assess the dose–response effects of the subcutaneous glucagon receptor/glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor dual agonist survodutide (BI 456906) on HbA1c levels and bodyweight reduction.MethodsThis Phase II, multicentre, randomised, double-blind, parallel-group, placebo-controlled study, conducted in clinical research centres, assessed survodutide in participants aged 18–75 years with type 2 diabetes, an HbA1c level of 53–86 mmol/mol (7.0–10.0%) and a BMI of 25–50 kg/m2 on a background of metformin therapy. Participants were randomised via interactive response technology to receive survodutide (up to 0.3, 0.9, 1.8 or 2.7 mg once weekly [qw; dose group (DG) 1–4, respectively] or 1.2 or 1.8 mg twice weekly [DG 5 and 6, respectively]), placebo or semaglutide (up to 1.0 mg qw). Participants and all those involved in the trial conduct/analysis were blinded; the semaglutide arm was open-label. The primary endpoint was absolute change from baseline in HbA1c after 16 weeks’ treatment. The key secondary endpoint was relative change from baseline in bodyweight after 16 weeks’ treatment.ResultsA total of 413 participants were randomised (DG1, n=50; DG2, n=50; DG3, n=52; DG4, n=50; DG5, n=51; DG6, n=50; semaglutide, n=50; placebo, n=60). The full analysis set comprised 411 treated participants (DG6, n=49; placebo, n=59). Adjusted mean (95% CI) HbA1c decreased from baseline (mean ± SD 64.7±9.2 mmol/mol [8.07±0.84%] after 16 weeks’ treatment: DG1 (n=41), −9.92 mmol/mol (−12.27, −7.56; −0.91% [−1.12, −0.69]); DG2 (n=46), −15.95 mmol/mol (−18.27, −13.63; −1.46% [−1.67, −1.25]); DG3 (n=36), −18.72 mmol/mol (−21.15, −16.29; −1.71% [−1.94, −1.49]); DG4 (n=33), −17.01 mmol/mol (−19.59, −14.43; −1.56% [−1.79, −1.32]); DG5 (n=44), −17.84 mmol/mol (−20.18, −15.51; −1.63% [−1.85, −1.42]); DG6 (n=36), −18.38 mmol/mol (−20.90, −15.87; −1.68% [−1.91, −1.45]). The mean reduction in HbA1c was similar with low-dose survodutide (DG2: −15.95 mmol/mol [−1.46%]; n=46) and semaglutide (−16.07 mmol/mol [−1.47%]; n=45). Mean (95% CI) bodyweight decreased dose-dependently up to −8.7% (−10.1, −7.3; DG6, n=37); survodutide ≥1.8 mg qw produced greater bodyweight reductions than semaglutide (−5.3% [−6.6, −4.1]; n=45). Adverse events (AEs) were reported for 77.8% of survodutide-treated participants (mainly gastrointestinal), 52.5% receiving placebo and 52.0% receiving semaglutide.Conclusions/interpretationSurvodutide reduced HbA1c levels and bodyweight after 16 weeks’ treatment in participants with type 2 diabetes. Dose-related gastrointestinal AEs could be mitigated with slower dose escalations.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT04153929 and EudraCT 2019-002390-60.FundingBoehringer Ingelheim Pharma GmbH & Co. KG, Ingelheim, Germany.Graphical

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