In a 52-week study of patients uncontrolled on ≥1500 mg metformin...
JANUVIA: Significantly less hypoglycemia with weight loss, compared with glipizide
Comparable A1C reductions
Primary End Point
- In the intent-to-treat population, patients treated with JANUVIA + metformin (n=576) achieved A1C reductions from baseline comparable to glipizide + metformin (n=559) ≥5 mg (mean daily dose 10 mg): JANUVIA –0.5% (mean baseline A1C 7.7%); glipizide –0.6% (mean baseline A1C 7.6%).
- In the per-protocol analysis, from a mean baseline A1C of 7.5%, similar mean A1C reductions were seen: JANUVIA –0.7% (n=382); glipizide –0.7% (n=411)
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. Note: The per-protocol population included patients without major protocol violations who had observations at baseline and week 52.
JANUVIA stimulates insulin release and decreases glucagon production in a glucose-dependent manner
- A conclusion in favor of the noninferiority of JANUVIA to glipizide may be limited to patients with baseline A1C comparable to those included in the study (>70% of patients had baseline A1C <8%, and >90% had A1C <9%).
View Percentage of Hypoglycemic Events
Patients taking JANUVIA reported 13x fewer hypoglycemic events vs patients taking glipizide
Selected Important Risk Information
As is typical with other antihyperglycemic agents used in combination with a sulfonylurea, when JANUVIA was used in combination with a sulfonylurea, a class of medications known to cause hypoglycemia, the incidence of hypoglycemia was increased over that of placebo. Therefore, a lower dose of sulfonylurea may be required to reduce the risk of hypoglycemia.

JANUVIA: 52-week study vs glipizide in patients uncontrolled on metformin alone
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Objective
To assess the effect of the addition of JANUVIA compared with glipizide on A1C in patients with type 2 diabetes with inadequate glycemic control (A1C 6.5%-10.0%) on metformin ≥1500 mg/day.
Study design
In a multinational, double-blind, randomized, factorial, parallel-group study, with week 52 as the primary time point, patients meeting eligibility criteria were randomized to receive JANUVIA 100 mg/day or glipizide 5 mg/day (which could be titrated up to 20 mg/day), in a 1:1 ratio.
Enrolled patient population
Patients aged 18 to 78 years (1) not on an antihyperglycemic agent, (2) on a single antihyperglycemic agent (either metformin or another agent), or (3) on dual oral combination treatment with metformin and another antihyperglycemic agent.
End points
Primary : A1C change at week 52.
Secondary : Including change in FPG, incidence of hypoglycemic events, body weight, C-peptide, insulin, and glucose profiles after a meal challenge.

