Mentz Robert J, Bethel M Angelyn, Gustavson Stephanie, Thompson Vivian P, Pagidipati Neha J, Buse John B, Chan Juliana C, Iqbal Nayyar, Maggioni Aldo P, Marso Steve P, Ohman Peter, Poulter Neil, Ramachandran Ambady, Zinman Bernard, Hernandez Adrian F, Holman Rury R
Duke Clinical Research Institute, Durham, NC.
Diabetes Trials Unit, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Am Heart J. 2017 May;187:1-9. doi: 10.1016/j.ahj.2017.02.005. Epub 2017 Feb 12.
EXSCEL is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial examining the effect of exenatide once-weekly (EQW) versus placebo on time to the primary composite outcome (cardiovascular death, nonfatal myocardial infarction or nonfatal stroke) in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM) and a wide range of cardiovascular (CV) risk.
Patients were enrolled at 688 sites in 35 countries. We describe their baseline characteristics according to prior CV event status and compare patients with those enrolled in prior glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist (GLP-1RA) outcomes trials.
Of a total of 14,752 participants randomized between June 2010 and September 2015, 6,788 (46.0%) patients were enrolled in Europe; 3,708 (25.1%), North America; 2,727 (18.5%), Latin America; and 1,529 (10.4%), Asia Pacific. Overall, 73% had at least one prior CV event (70% coronary artery disease, 24% peripheral arterial disease, 22% cerebrovascular disease). The median (IQR) age was 63 years (56, 69), 38% were female, median baseline HbA1c was 8.0% (7.3, 8.9) and 16% had a prior history of heart failure. Those without a prior CV event were younger with a shorter duration of diabetes and better renal function than those with at least one prior CV event. Compared with prior GLP-1RA trials, EXSCEL has a larger percentage of patients without a prior CV event and a notable percentage who were taking a dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitor at baseline (15%).
EXSCEL is one of the largest global GLP-1RA trials, evaluating the safety and efficacy of EQW with a broad patient population that may extend generalizability compared to prior GLP-1RA trials (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01144338).
EXSCEL是一项随机、双盲、安慰剂对照试验,旨在研究每周一次的艾塞那肽(EQW)与安慰剂相比,对2型糖尿病(DM)且具有广泛心血管(CV)风险的患者达到主要复合终点(心血管死亡、非致死性心肌梗死或非致死性卒中)时间的影响。
患者在35个国家的688个地点入组。我们根据既往CV事件状态描述他们的基线特征,并将患者与既往胰高血糖素样肽-1受体激动剂(GLP-1RA)结局试验中入组的患者进行比较。
在2010年6月至2015年9月期间随机分组的14752名参与者中,6788名(46.0%)患者在欧洲入组;3708名(25.1%)在北美;2727名(18.5%)在拉丁美洲;1529名(10.4%)在亚太地区。总体而言,73%的患者至少有一次既往CV事件(70%为冠状动脉疾病,24%为外周动脉疾病,22%为脑血管疾病)。年龄中位数(IQR)为63岁(56,69),38%为女性,基线糖化血红蛋白(HbA1c)中位数为8.0%(7.3,8.9),16%有心力衰竭病史。与至少有一次既往CV事件的患者相比,无既往CV事件的患者更年轻,糖尿病病程更短,肾功能更好。与既往GLP-1RA试验相比,EXSCEL中无既往CV事件的患者比例更高,且有相当比例的患者在基线时服用二肽基肽酶-4抑制剂(15%)。
EXSCEL是全球最大的GLP-1RA试验之一,评估了EQW在广泛患者群体中的安全性和有效性,与既往GLP-1RA试验相比,其普遍性可能更广(临床试验注册号,NCT01144338)。