BERLIN – An investigational oral formulation of the glucagonlike peptide–1 receptor agonist (GLP-1 RA) semaglutide reduced glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) to a greater extent than did placebo at all doses tested in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) in the phase 3a PIONEER 1 trial.
The estimated mean change in HbA1c from baseline to week 26 – the primary endpoint – using an on-treatment analysis was –0.8% with a once-daily dose of 3 mg, –1.3% with a once-daily dose of 7 mg, and –1.5% with a once-daily dose of 14 mg. The corresponding value for placebo was –0.1%, with all comparisons statistically significant (P less than .001).
The on-treatment analysis evaluated treatment effects for all randomized patients (n = 703) and assumed that all subjects remained on-treatment and excluded the effect of any rescue medication. Results for an intention-to-treat (ITT) analysis provided similar results, however, with estimated mean changes in HbA1c of –0.9%, –1.2%, and –1.4% for the three respective semaglutide doses and –0.3% for placebo.
“There was a very nice dose-dependent decrease in HbA1c, which was superior to placebo for all doses of semaglutide” said study investigator Martin Haluzík, MD, at the annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes.
“I think it’s quite important to stress the magnitude of the decrease of HbA1c, because with the highest dose it was –1.5% from a baseline of 8%, which I believe is something that hasn’t ever really been seen with any other oral antidiabetic medication,” added Dr. Haluzík, professor of internal medicine at the 1st Faculty of Medicine at Charles University and deputy head of the Institute for Clinical and Experimental Medicine, both in Prague.
Currently, GLP-1 RAs are available only in a subcutaneous formulation, Dr. Haluzík reminded his audience, adding that oral semaglutide was the first GLP-1 RA to be developed in a tablet formulation and was in the late stages of clinical development.
PIONEER 1 is the first of 10 phase 3a trials with oral semaglutide to be reported. “Additional studies, across the full spectrum of diabetes care, in special populations, comparing it with active comparators with varied trial duration, have been completed or will be completed in 2018,” said coinvestigator for the study Vanita Aroda, MD, during a separate presentation at a dedicated symposium on the PIONEER program.
Dr. Aroda, the director of the diabetes research program at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, observed that oral semaglutide was being evaluated from early care as monotherapy in the PIONEER 1 study. The other trials, such as PIONEER 2, PIONEER 3, PIONEER 4, and PIONEER 7 were looking at oral semaglutide in combination with oral antidiabetic agents versus various active comparators; PIONEER 5 and PIONEER 6 were in special populations; and PIONEER 8 was looking at its use on top of basal insulin. Two further trials are also part of the study program.
“I think this is the first time that we actually have completed data of an entire program, including cardiovascular data, all within the same year,” Dr. Aroda said. “All of the studies are in the process of data analysis or data reporting.”
PIONEER 1 was a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial examining efficacy and safety of semaglutide versus placebo in 703 adults with drug-naive T2DM who were being treated with diet and exercise only.
Three doses of oral semaglutide – 3 mg, 7 mg, and 14 mg – were assessed and compared with placebo. There was a fixed 4-week dose escalation period, with all patients starting treatment with 3 mg of semaglutide and then increasing to 7 mg by week 4 and 14 mg by week 8. This was to try to reduce the risk of gastrointestinal side effects, which are known to occur with GLP-1 RAs.
Secondary outcome measures were change in body weight, fasting plasma glucose, HbA1c below a target of 7% (53 mmol/mol), which were all measured from baseline to week 26; adverse events, including severe and blood glucose–confirmed symptomatic hypoglycemic episodes, were assessed out to week 31.
The average age of patients in the trial was around 55 years, around half were female, and the starting HbA1c was approximately 8%.The mean body weight ranged from 86.9 kg to 89 kg in the different treatment groups, with a similar body mass index of about 32 kg/m2.
Clinically meaningful weight loss, compared with placebo, was only achieved with the highest dose of oral semaglutide, with a –4.1 kg reduction versus –1.5 kg for placebo from baseline to week 26 (P less than .001, on-treatment analysis). Reductions in body weight for the 3-mg and 7-mg oral semaglutide doses were a respective –1.7 kg and –2.5 kg. ITT results were again similar, with weight losses of –1.5, –2.3, and –3.7 kg for the 3-, 7-, and 14-mg doses of oral semaglutide, respectively, and –1.4 kg for placebo.
More patients treated with oral semaglutide 3, 7, or 14 mg versus placebo achieved an HbA1c of below 7% (59.1%, 71.9%, and 80.3%, respectively, vs. 33.8%) or a body weight loss of 5% or more (21.3%, 28.7%, and 44.3% vs. 15.7%).
Furthermore, more patients treated with oral semaglutide achieved an HbA1c of or below 7% without hypoglycemic episodes or body weight gain than did those given placebo. There were also more patients who achieved an HbA1c reduction of at least 1% and a weight loss of 3% or higher.
“Oral semaglutide demonstrated a safety and tolerability profile consistent with that of [injectable] GLP-1 RAs,” Dr. Haluzík reported. Adverse events were seen in 57.7%, 53.1%, and 56.6%of patients treated with 3, 7, and 14 mg of oral semaglutide and 55.6% of those treated with placebo.
The most common adverse events seen with oral semaglutide affected the gastrointestinal tract, with nausea affecting 8%, 5.1%, and 16% of 3, 7, and 14 mg–treated patients versus 5.6% of placebo-treated patients. Vomiting affected a respective 2.9%, 4.6%, 6.9%, and 2.1%, and diarrhea a respective 8.6%, 5.1%, 5.1%, and 2.2%.
Severe or blood glucose–confirmed, symptomatic hypoglycemia was reported in 2.9%, 1.1%, and 0.6%of those treated with 3, 7, 14 mg of oral semaglutide and 0.6% of placebo-treated patients.
PIONEER 1 represents a “step change in GLP-1 receptor agonist therapy”, said Cliff Bailey, MD, who discussed the trial aa the EASD’s independent commentator during a symposium on the PIONEER program. These data are “leading to a new delivery route for GLP-1 receptor agonists, from injection to oral,” and “this can be done with good metabolic efficacy, with substantial reductions in A1c and body weight, and with a safety profile that’s comparable to the subcutaneous injection.”
Dr. Bailey, who is professor of clinical science at Aston University in Birmingham, England, noted, however, the oral dosing of semaglutide “requires patient commitment because it needs to be taken before breakfast time, and it may also, to some extent, affect the timing of some of the other medications.”
The study was sponsored by Novo Nordisk. Dr. Haluzík disclosed acting as a consultant to AstraZeneca, Eli Lilly, Johnson & Johnson, Mundipharma, Novatin, Novo Nordisk, and Sanofi Aventis. Dr. Aroda was an investigator in the PIONEER 1 study and disclosed acting as a consultant to Novo Nordisk; she also disclosed relationships with multiple other pharmaceutical companies, including AstraZeneca, BMS, Calbra, Eisai, Elcelyx Therapeutics, Janssen, and Sanofi Aventis. Dr. Bailey acknowledged attending advisory boards, undertaking ad hoc consultancy work, and receiving research and travel support from several pharmaceutical companies that included Novo Nordisk.
SOURCES: Haluzík M et al. EASD 2018, Abstract 38; Aroda V. EASD 2018, Session S18 - PIONEER Trial; Bailey C. EASD 2018, Session S18 - PIONEER Trial.