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Abstract Aim PIONEER REAL Canada examined real‐world clinical outcomes associated with the use of once‐daily oral semaglutide in adults with type 2 diabetes. Materials and Methods This was a 34‐ to 44‐week, multicentre, prospective, open‐label, non‐interventional study in adults who were treatment‐naive to injectable glucose‐lowering medication and initiated oral semaglutide in routine clinical practice. The primary endpoint was the change in glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c) from baseline to the end of the study (EoS). Secondary endpoints assessed at EoS were change from baseline in body weight (BW); the proportion of participants reaching HbA1c levels <7% and the composite endpoints, HbA1c reduction ≥1% point with BW reduction ≥3% and ≥5%; and treatment satisfaction measured using Diabetes Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaires (DTSQ) status and change. Primary analyses were based on the in‐study observation period. Results In total, 182 participants initiated oral semaglutide (mean age, 58.6 years; HbA1c, 8.0%; BW, 93.7 kg). The estimated changes (95% confidence interval) from baseline to EoS in HbA1c and BW were −1.09% points (−1.24, −0.94; p < .0001) and −7.17% (−8.24, −6.11; p < .0001), respectively. At EoS, 53.7% of participants had HbA1c levels <7%; 39.3% and 31.6% reached HbA1c reduction ≥1% point plus BW reduction ≥3% and ≥5%, respectively. Treatment satisfaction significantly increased (DTSQ status, +4.47 points; DTSQ change, 11.83 points; both p < .0001). At EoS, 75.3% of participants remained on oral semaglutide (55.5% received oral semaglutide 14 mg). No new safety signals were identified for oral semaglutide. Conclusions In PIONEER REAL Canada, participants treated with oral semaglutide in routine clinical practice experienced clinically relevant reductions in HbA1c and BW and increased treatment satisfaction.
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Akshay Jain
Jain University
Sonja M. Reichert
Western University
Hanan Amadid
Steno Diabetes Centers
Diabetes Obesity and Metabolism
University of British Columbia
McGill University
University of Calgary
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Jain et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e747eeb6db6435876c137a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/dom.15493