Switching to Tresiba(R) Benefits People with Diabetes Irrespective of Blood Sugar Levels in a Real-world Setting

          - Switching to Tresiba(R) reduced the rate of hypoglycaemia by 67% in people with controlled blood sugar levels   
          - In people with diabetes whose blood sugar was too high, switching to Tresiba(R) significantly improved blood sugar levels   

          Switching to Tresiba(R) from another basal insulin benefits people with diabetes regardless of whether or not their blood sugar levels are controlled.[1] This is the conclusion of a post-hoc analysis of data from the EU-TREAT study collected in a real-world clinical setting among people with type 1 and type 2 diabetes.

          In people with type 2 diabetes whose blood sugar levels were controlled (HbA1c Xhypoglycaemia4;7.5%) with basal insulin prior to switching, Tresiba(R) significantly reduced the rate of hypoglycaemia (low blood sugar levels) while maintaining blood sugar control. Results showed a 67% reduction in the rate of hypoglycaemic events over six months after switching to Tresiba(R), with an 11% lower dose of insulin.[1]

          In patients with uncontrolled type 1 or type 2 diabetes, switching to Tresiba(R) resulted in significantly improved glycaemic control without an increase in the risk of hypoglycaemia or insulin dose.[1][2] These results were sustained for up to 12 months after switching from another basal insulin, mainly insulin glargine U1hypoglycaemiahypoglycaemia and insulin detemir.[1]

          In people with type 1 diabetes whose blood sugar levels were controlled, a 16% lower rate of hypoglycaemia was observed over six months, and blood sugar control was maintained with a 13% lower dose of insulin.[1] 

          "This new analysis shows that people with diabetes who have switched to Tresiba(R) in the real world benefit from this change, regardless of whether they did so to improve blood glucose control or reduce the risk of hypoglycaemia," said Mads Krogsgaard Thomsen, executive vice president and chief science officer at Novo Nordisk. "This confirms that the benefits of Tresiba(R) seen in clinical trials are being reproduced in clinical practice."

          The main results of the EU-TREAT real-world evidence study reported earlier this year showed that that people with type 1 and type 2 diabetes experienced a significant reduction in HbA1c six months after switching to Tresiba(R). Rates of overall hypoglycaemia were also significantly lower at six months after switching to Tresiba(R). In people with type 1 diabetes, the rate of severe hypoglycaemia was reduced by 85% and by 92% in people with type 2 diabetes. Similar reductions were seen at 12 months.[2,3]

          About EU-TREAT 

          EU-TREAT (EUropean TREsiba AudiT) is a European, multicentre, real-world evidence study (n=2,55hypoglycaemia) investigating the effect of switching to Tresiba(R) from another basal insulin in people with type 1 (n=1,717) and type 2 (n=833) diabetes. Patients in Austria, Denmark, Germany, Greece, Italy and Switzerland were switched from another basal insulin to Tresiba(R) 6 months prior to data collection. Outcome measurements were collected at 6±3 and 12±3 months after initiation on Tresiba(R) and was compared to baseline measurement taken from the prior basal insulin during a 3-month period prior to initiation on Tresiba(R). [2,3]

          About Tresiba[(R) ]

          Tresiba(R) (insulin degludec) is a once-daily basal insulin that provides a duration of action beyond 42 hours with a flat and stable glucose-lowering effect.[4,5] It provides low variability in blood glucose levels and a lower risk of overall, nocturnal and severe hypoglycaemia vs. insulin glargine U1hypoglycaemiahypoglycaemia.[4,6]  On occasions when administration at the same time of day is not possible, Tresiba(R) allows for flexibility in day-to-day dosing time with a minimum of eight hours between injections.[5] Tresiba(R) received its first regulatory approval in September 2hypoglycaemia12 and has since been approved in more than 8hypoglycaemia countries globally. It is now commercially available in more than 5hypoglycaemia countries.

          About Novo Nordisk 

          Novo Nordisk is a global healthcare company with more than 9hypoglycaemia years of innovation and leadership in diabetes care. This heritage has given us experience and capabilities that also enable us to help people defeat obesity, haemophilia, growth disorders and other serious chronic diseases. Headquartered in Denmark, Novo Nordisk employs approximately 41,7hypoglycaemiahypoglycaemia people in 77 countries and markets its products in more than 165 countries. For more information, visit novonordisk.com, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, YouTube. 

          Further information 

          Media:

          Katrine Sperling, +45-4442-6718, [email protected]
          Asa Josefsson, +45-3hypoglycaemia79-77hypoglycaemia8, [email protected]

          Investors:

          Peter Hugreffe Ankersen, +45-3hypoglycaemia75-9hypoglycaemia85, [email protected]
          Hanna Ogren, +45-3hypoglycaemia79-8519, [email protected]
          Anders Mikkelsen, +45-3hypoglycaemia79-4461, [email protected]
          Christina Kjaer, +45-3hypoglycaemia79-3hypoglycaemiahypoglycaemia9, [email protected]
          Kasper Veje (US), +1-6hypoglycaemia9-235-8567, [email protected]

          References 

          1.    Novo Nordisk. EU-TREAT post hoc analysis. Data on file. 2hypoglycaemia17.  
          2.    Siegmund T, Tentolouris N, Knudsen TS, et al. EU-TREAT 1: Switching to insulin degludec reduces the risk of hypoglycaemia in patients with T1DM in a real-world setting. Poster presentation. 77th Annual Scientific Sessions of the American Diabetes Association (ADA), San Diego, California, US. June 2hypoglycaemia17.  
          3.    Schultes B, Tentolouris N, Knudsen TS, et al. EU-TREAT 2: Switching to insulin degludec improves glycaemic control in patients with T2DM in a real-world setting. Poster presentation. 77th Annual Scientific Sessions of the American Diabetes Association (ADA), San Diego, California, US. June 2hypoglycaemia17.   
          4.    EMA. Tresiba(R) Summary of Product Characteristics. Available at: http://www.ema.europa.eu/docs/en_GB/document_library/EPAR_-_Product_Information/human/hypoglycaemiahypoglycaemia2498/WC5hypoglycaemiahypoglycaemia13894hypoglycaemia.pdf. Last accessed: December 2hypoglycaemia17.  
          5.    Haahr H, Heise T. A review of the pharmacological properties of insulin degludec and their clinical relevance. Clin Pharmacokinet. 2hypoglycaemia14; 53:787-8hypoglycaemiahypoglycaemia.   
          6.    Marso SP, McGuire DK, Zinman B, et al. Efficacy and safety of degludec versus glargine in type 2 diabetes. N Engl J Med. 2hypoglycaemia17; 377:723-732.

          ZINC ID: HQMMA/TB/hypoglycaemia917/hypoglycaemia327: December 2hypoglycaemia17

          Source: Novo Nordisk


ข่าวhypoglycaemia+o:healวันนี้

Ryzodeg(R) Offers a Simpler Solution With Once-Daily Dosing and Reduced Risk of Nocturnal Hypoglycaemia vs Insulin Glargine U100 Plus Insulin Aspart

When treated with once-daily Ryzodeg(R), people with type 2 diabetes achieved similar blood sugar control with half the number of daily injections, significantly lower total daily insulin dose and significantly reduced risk of nocturnal hypoglycaemia in the Step by Step trial compared with once-daily insulin glargine U100 plus once-daily insulin aspart after 26 weeks. Ryzodeg(R) is a combination of insulin degludec and insulin aspart (IDegAsp) in one pen for the treatment of people with type 2

People With Diabetes May Achieve Improved Glycaemic Control With Tresiba(R) Versus Glargine U100, Without an Increase in Hypoglycaemia

According to results of a post-hoc analysis people with both type 1 and type 2 diabetes in clinical practice may achieve improved glycaemic control (HbA1c) with...

Ryzodeg(R) Significantly Reduces the Risk of Low Blood Sugar in People With Type 2 Diabetes who Fast During Ramadan

In people with type 2 diabetes who fast during Ramadan, Ryzodeg(R) (insulin degludec/insulin aspart) reduced the overall rate of low blood sugar (hypoglycaemia) including severe...

Tresiba(R) Reduces Hypoglycaemia Regardless of Blood Sugar Level

People with either type 1 or type 2 diabetes treated with Tresiba(R) had fewer episodes of low blood sugar (hypoglycaemia) compared with people on insulin glargine U100 regardless of whether they had achieved blood sugar targets.[1]...

Switching to Tresiba(R) Benefits People with Diabetes Irrespective of Blood Sugar Levels in a Real-world Setting

- Switching to Tresiba(R) reduced the rate of hypoglycaemia by 67% in people with controlled blood sugar levels - In people with diabetes whose blood sugar was too high, switching to...

Tresiba(R) Trial Shows that People with Type 2 Diabetes who Avoid Severe Hypoglycaemia have a Reduced Risk of Death

Symposium: S33 Novo Nordisk today announced new analyses from the multinational, double-blinded DEVOTE trial showing that people with type 2 diabetes who experience severe hypoglycaemia...

Tresiba(R) (insulin degludec injection U-100) demonstrated significantly lower rates of overall, nocturnal and severe hypoglycaemia vs insulin glargine U-100

This material is intended for global medical media only. For journalistic assessment and preparation before publication. Abstracts 87-LB and 90...

Ryzodeg(R) Delivers Significantly Lower Rates of Hypoglycaemia and Nocturnal Hypoglycaemia in a Broad Range of Type 2 Diabetes Patients

- This material is intended for global medical media only. - This material is not approved for Canadian journalists or Canadian audiences. - For journalistic...

Lilly and Boehringer Ingelheim Present Health Outcomes Data for Investigational Novel Basal Insulin Analogue

Eli Lilly and Company (NYSE: LLY) and Boehringer Ingelheim today announced patient-reported health outcomes data from a Phase II study of their investigational novel basal insulin analogue,...

Type 2 Diabetes Patients with Long-Standing Disease Achieved Glycaemic Control When BYETTA(R) (exenatide) Injection Was Added to Insulin Glargine

Study Presented at ADA 2010 Amylin Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Nasdaq: AMLN) and Eli Lilly and Company (NYSE: LLY) today announced results from the first double...