Pharmacokinetic/Pharmacodynamic Modeling of Efficacy and Hypoglycemia Rate When Switching From Once-Daily Basal Insulin to Once-Weekly Insulin Icodec Without or With a One-Time Additional Dose in Insulin-Experienced Individuals With Type 2 Diabetes
Ildiko Lingvay MD, MPH, MSCS , Björg Ásbjörnsdóttir MD, PhD , Niels R. Kristensen PhD , Christian Laugesen MD, PhD , André Vianna MD, PhD , Filip K. Knop MD, PhD
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Abstract
Objective
Insulin icodec (icodec), a once-weekly basal insulin analog, has been investigated in the phase 3a ONWARDS clinical trial program. This pharmacokinetic (PK)/pharmacodynamic (PD) modeling analysis of data from the ONWARDS 2 and 4 trials investigated efficacy outcomes and hypoglycemia rate in insulin-experienced individuals with type 2 diabetes when switching from daily basal insulin to icodec without or with a 50% one-time additional dose for the first injection only.
Methods
Data from 2 randomized, 26-week, phase 3a trials of insulin-experienced individuals with type 2 diabetes on a basal (ONWARDS 2) or basal-bolus (ONWARDS 4) insulin regimen were used for PK/PD model development and validation. The effect of switching to icodec without versus with a 50% one-time additional dose on prebreakfast self-measured blood glucose, glycated hemoglobin, weekly insulin dose, and clinically significant hypoglycemia was assessed.
Results
Model predictions suggested that switching to icodec without versus with a 50% one-time additional dose would result in a mild, transient (1-2 weeks) increase in prebreakfast self-measured blood glucose after treatment initiation that would decrease to matching levels between groups by week 4 and remain similar between groups until end of treatment (week 26). There were no model-predicted differences between groups in glycated hemoglobin reduction or clinically significant hypoglycemia over the 26-week study period or in weekly icodec dose at week 26.
Conclusions
This PK/PD model analysis suggests that omitting administration of a 50% one-time additional dose when switching to icodec from daily basal insulin would not be predicted to result in any sustained effects.
期刊介绍:
Endocrine Practice (ISSN: 1530-891X), a peer-reviewed journal published twelve times a year, is the official journal of the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists (AACE). The primary mission of Endocrine Practice is to enhance the health care of patients with endocrine diseases through continuing education of practicing endocrinologists.