University of Leicester
Browse
PIONEER 3_Rosenstock ENDO19 poster_printed_18Mar19.pdf (236.06 kB)

SAT-139 Clinical Impact of Oral Semaglutide Compared with Sitagliptin in T2D on Metformin ± Sulfonylurea: The Pioneer 3 Trial.

Download (236.06 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2020-05-07, 13:41 authored by Julio Rosenstock, Dale Allison, Andreas Birkenfeld, Thalia Blicher, Srikanth Deenadayalan, Jacob Jacobsen, Pierre Serusclat, Rafael Violante, Hirotaka Watada, Melanie Davies
Long-term effects, safety and tolerability of oral semaglutide (SEMA; a GLP-1 receptor agonist [GLP-1RA]) vs sitagliptin (SITA) as add-on to metformin ± sulfonylurea was investigated in patients (pts) with T2D in a 78-week, double-blind, double-dummy trial. Pts were randomized to once daily oral SEMA 3 mg (N=466), 7 mg (N=466) or 14 mg (N=465), or SITA 100 mg (N=467). Primary endpoint was change in HbA, confirmatory secondary endpoint was change in body weight, both from baseline to week 26. Two estimands were defined (‘treatment policy [TPol] estimand’: treatment effect regardless of trial product discontinuation and rescue medication use; ‘trial product estimand’: treatment effect assuming on trial product without rescue medication use) in all randomized pts. Confirmatory testing was based on the TPol estimand; within each dose level, non-inferiority for the primary endpoint (non-inferiority margin: 0.3%) had to be confirmed before testing superiority for the primary and confirmatory secondary endpoints. Estimated week 26 HbA reductions with 7 and 14 mg were –1.0% and –1.3%, vs –0.8% with SITA, and were superior (TPol estimand; estimated treatment difference vs SITA [ETD; 95% CI]: –0.3% [–0.4, –0.1]; –0.5% [–0.6, –0.4]; both P<0.001). Non-inferiority of 3 mg vs SITA was not confirmed (ETD: 0.2% [0.1, 0.3]; P=0.09); HbA reductions favored SITA (P=0.008). Similar results were obtained with the trial product estimand at week 26 (ETD: –0.3% [–0.4, –0.2]; –0.6% [–0.7, –0.5] for 7 and 14 mg; both P<0.001 favoring oral SEMA; 0.2% [0.1, 0.4] for 3 mg; P<0.001 favoring SITA). At week 78, HbA reductions with 14 mg were statistically significantly greater vs SITA for both estimands; there was no statistically significant difference with 3 mg (both estimands) or 7 mg (TPol estimand). All oral SEMA doses significantly lowered body weight vs SITA at week 26 for the TPol estimand (ETD: –0.6 kg [–1.1, –0.1]; –1.6 kg [–2.0, –1.1]; –2.5 kg [–3.0, –2.0] for 3, 7 and 14 mg; all P<0.02), confirming superiority of 7 and 14 mg (3 mg superiority not tested), and the trial product estimand (ETD: –0.5 kg [–1.0, –0.1]; –1.5 kg [–2.0, –1.1]; –2.6 kg [–3.1, –2.1] for 3, 7 and 14 mg; all P<0.03). Week 78 body weight reductions were also statistically significant, favoring oral SEMA (all doses, both estimands). Adverse events (AEs) occurred similarly across treatment arms. The most common AE with oral SEMA was transient mild/moderate nausea, affecting 7.5–15.7% of pts. Serious AEs were reported by 13.7%, 10.1% and 9.5% of pts for 3, 7 and 14 mg, and 12.4% for SITA. AEs led to premature trial product discontinuation in 5.6%, 5.8% and 11.6% of pts for 3, 7 and 14 mg, and 5.2% for SITA, mainly due to gastrointestinal AEs. In conclusion, oral semaglutide 7 and 14 mg provided statistically superior HbA and body weight reductions at week 26 compared with SITA 100 mg (TPol estimand). Safety and tolerability were consistent with other GLP-1RAs.

History

Citation

Journal of the Endocrine Society, (2019) 3(Suppl 1) SAT-139

Published in

Journal of the Endocrine Society

Volume

3

Issue

Suppl 1

Pagination

SAT-139

Publisher

The Endocrine Society

issn

2472-1972

eissn

2472-1972

Copyright date

2019

Available date

2019-04-30

Publisher version

https://academic.oup.com/jes/article/3/Supplement_1/SAT-139/5483201

Notes

Presented at the Endocrine Society’s 101st Annual Meeting and Expo, March 23–26 2019, New Orleans, LA, USA.

Spatial coverage

New Orleans, LA, USA.

Temporal coverage: start date

2019-03-23

Temporal coverage: end date

2019-03-26

Language

eng

Usage metrics

    University of Leicester Publications

    Categories

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC