FDA/CDC

FDA okays semaglutide higher dose, 2 mg/week, for type 2 diabetes


 

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved a higher 2-mg dose of the GLP-1 agonist semaglutide (Ozempic, Novo Nordisk) for adults with type 2 diabetes, giving a higher-dose alternative to the previous maximum 1-mg dose of semaglutide, administered by subcutaneous injection once weekly.

Semaglutide is currently available as 0.5-mg and 1-mg doses.

Results from the pivotal SUSTAIN FORTE study of the 2-mg dose (which, like lower-dose semaglutide for type 2 diabetes, comes in a single-use pen injector) showed that when compared head-to-head with a 1-mg/week dose in a 40-week study with 961 randomized patients, the 2-mg regimen led to a significant average incremental reduction in A1c levels of 0.23 percentage points. The 2-mg dose also produced a significant incremental increase in weight loss, with patients losing 0.93 kg more on the higher dose.

The 2-mg dose gives patients with type 2 diabetes and clinicians an “additional option” when a bigger “shift” in blood glucose is needed, said Juan Pablo Frias, MD, National Research Institute, Los Angeles, California, who was lead investigator for SUSTAIN FORTE, in a written statement.

As well as reducing glucose levels, semaglutide has been shown to reduce the risk of major cardiovascular events in adults with type 2 diabetes and known cardiovascular disease.

Semaglutide was approved as a 2.4-mg injectable dose, as Wegovy, in 2021 for weight loss in patients with overweight or obesity.

SUSTAIN FORTE and other trials of semaglutide were sponsored by Novo Nordisk. SURPASS-2 and other trials of tirzepatide were sponsored by Lilly. Dr. Frias was lead investigator for both SUSTAIN FORTE and SURPASS-2, as well as an investigator for other trials sponsored by Lilly, Novo Nordisk, and other companies.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Recommended Reading

Ukrainian diabetes care, insulin access ‘severely disrupted’
MDedge Family Medicine
Inside insulin (Part 2): Approaching a cure for type 1 diabetes?
MDedge Family Medicine
Food insecurity linked to metabolic syndrome in Hispanic/Latino youth
MDedge Family Medicine
Empagliflozin scores topline win in EMPA-KIDNEY trial
MDedge Family Medicine
Maternal obesity promotes risk of perinatal death
MDedge Family Medicine
Mild COVID-19 infection linked to later type 2 diabetes
MDedge Family Medicine
Intermittent fasting good for weight loss, at least short term
MDedge Family Medicine
‘Profound implications’: COVID ups diabetes risk 40% a year later
MDedge Family Medicine
Artificial sweeteners: A modifiable cancer risk?
MDedge Family Medicine
Metformin use linked to birth defects in boys
MDedge Family Medicine