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Eli Lilly and Company

Study Shows Exenatide Improves Blood Sugar Levels as Effectively as Insulin Glargine

Athens, Greece (ots/PRNewswire)

-- Patients on exenatide also lost weight,
                    while glargine patients gained weight --
Eli Lilly and Company (NYSE: LLY) and Amylin Pharmaceuticals,
Inc., (Nasdaq: AMLN) today announced results from a study indicating
that exenatide improves blood sugar levels as effectively as insulin
glargine (Lantus(R), Sanofi-Aventis) for people with type 2 diabetes
failing to achieve acceptable blood sugar control on both metformin
and a sulfonylurea, two common oral diabetes medications.
Both treatments were effective in lowering blood sugar, and
patients taking exenatide experienced weight reductions while those
on insulin glargine gained weight. The findings were presented at the
41st annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of
Diabetes in Athens, Greece.
Exenatide is the first in a new class of medicines known as
incretin mimetics and was approved for use in the United States by
the U.S. Food and Drug Administration on 28 April 2005 for the
treatment of type 2 diabetes. The U.S. is the first country in the
world that has received regulatory approval for exenatide. It is not
approved for use in Europe. Lilly and Amylin anticipate submissions
for regulatory review in other countries in the near future.
In this study, patients in each treatment group -- either
exenatide or insulin glargine -- lowered their average blood sugar
(glucose) levels, as measured by hemoglobin A1C (A1C), by
approximately 1 percent from baseline after six months of therapy.
A1C measures a person's average glucose level over a three-month
period and is often used by healthcare providers to assess blood
glucose management. The American Diabetes Association recommends a
target A1C of less than 7 percent. Approximately half of the patients
in each treatment group achieved an A1C of 7 percent or less.
The study also showed that patients on exenatide lost an average
of 2.3 kg, while patients on insulin glargine gained an average of
1.8 kg. Weight gain is a common side effect of insulin therapy. In
addition, exenatide reduced peak glucose levels after meals better
than insulin glargine. In contrast, insulin glargine was associated
with lower fasting glucose levels. Both the exenatide and insulin
glargine groups had similar rates of symptomatic hypoglycemia (low
blood sugar). Patients in both treatment groups continued their oral
therapy as well, which included a sulfonylurea, a therapy known to
cause hypoglycemia when used alone.
"This is the first comparator study in which a non-insulin
treatment for diabetes has demonstrated similar blood glucose control
to insulin for patients who are failing to achieve treatment targets
on oral medications," said Professor Robert Heine, Director of the
Diabetes Center, VU University Medical Center in the Netherlands, and
a lead author of the study's abstract. "When considering the weight
loss and achieved glucose control, the results of this study
demonstrate that exenatide could potentially be an effective tool for
the management of type 2 diabetes patients who cannot control their
blood sugar using oral medications."
Key Findings
The primary objective of the study was to determine whether
comparable glycemic control can be achieved in both groups, as
evaluated by a change in A1C levels from baseline. Additional
endpoints of the study included effects on weight, postprandial
glucose excursions and incidence of hypoglycemia.
A1C reduction:
  • At the end of the study, both treatment groups had achieved similar A1C reductions. Exenatide lowered A1C 1.0 percent while insulin glargine lowered A1C 1.1 percent.
  • Forty-six percent of patients in the exenatide group achieved the target A1C level less than or equal to 7 percent compared to 48 percent in the insulin glargine group.
  • When measured against the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologist recommended target A1C of less than or equal to 6.5 percent, 31 percent of patients in the exenatide group achieved this level compared to 24 percent in the insulin glargine group.
Weight change:
  • Weight loss in the exenatide arm: Patients using exenatide showed an average weight reduction of 2.3kg (5.1 pounds).
  • Weight gain in the insulin glargine arm: On average, patients using insulin glargine gained 1.8kg (4.0 pounds).
Postprandial excursions (post-meal blood glucose levels):
- As measured by seven-point glucose monitoring, exenatide reduced
postprandial excursions (post-meal blood glucose levels) following
breakfast and dinner. In contrast, insulin glargine predominantly
reduced fasting glucose (at least eight hours after a meal).
Hypoglycemia:
- Rates of symptomatic hypoglycemia were similar between treatment
groups.
The most common adverse event for exenatide was nausea (57
percent), which was generally mild-to-moderate and tended to decrease
in frequency and severity over time. Six percent of exenatide treated
subjects discontinued due to nausea.
Study Design/Protocol
More than 500 patients were involved in the 26-week, multi-center,
open-label, randomized, two-arm, parallel trial. The trial was
designed to determine if exenatide can be used safely and effectively
in combination with metformin plus a sulfonylurea as an alternative
to insulin glargine for type 2 diabetes patients.
Patients were randomized into two arms. One arm received a fixed
dose of exenatide (5 micrograms twice-a-day for first four weeks, 10
micrograms twice-a-day for remainder of study, n=283) in conjunction
with metformin and a sulfonylurea. The second arm received insulin
glargine once daily beginning at 10 insulin units per day (n=268) in
conjunction with metformin and a sulfonylurea. The glargine dose was
titrated based on finger-stick blood glucose monitoring to achieve a
pre-specified target fasting blood glucose level. Because of the
fixed dosing of exenatide, patients in that arm required no dose
titration or additional finger-stick testing. The A1C baselines for
the two groups were 8.2 plus or minus 1.0 percent for exenatide and
8.3 plus or minus 1.0 percent for insulin glargine.
About exenatide
Exenatide is the first in a new class of drugs for the treatment
of type 2 diabetes called incretin mimetics and exhibits many of the
same effects as the human incretin hormone glucagon-like peptide-1
(GLP-1). GLP-1, secreted in response to food intake, has multiple
effects on the stomach, liver, pancreas and brain that work in
concert to regulate blood sugar.(1) Exenatide was approved by the
U.S. FDA for use by people in the United States with type 2 diabetes
who are unsuccessful at controlling their blood sugar levels despite
using the commonly prescribed oral medications metformin, a
sulfonylurea or both. The U.S. is the first country in the world that
has received regulatory approval for exenatide. It is not approved
for use in Europe. Lilly and Amylin anticipate submissions for
regulatory review in other countries in the near future.
About Incretin Mimetics
Incretin mimetics is a new class of therapeutics for use in the
fight against type 2 diabetes. An incretin mimetic works to mimic the
antidiabetic or glucose-lowering actions of naturally occurring human
hormones called incretins. These actions include stimulating the
body's ability to produce insulin in response to elevated levels of
blood sugar, inhibiting the release of a hormone called glucagon
following meals, slowing the rate at which nutrients are absorbed
into the bloodstream and reducing food intake. Exenatide is the first
U.S. FDA-approved agent of this new class of medications.
About Diabetes
Diabetes affects an estimated 194 million adults worldwide(2) and
around 48,4 million in Europe.(2) Of those affected approximately 85
to 95 percent have type 2 diabetes, a condition where the body does
not produce enough insulin and/or the cells in the body do not
respond normally to insulin.(3) Type 2 diabetes usually occurs in
adults over the age of 40, but is increasingly common in younger
people.(3) In virtually every developed society, diabetes is ranked
among the leading causes of blindness, renal failure and lower limb
amputation, as well as death through its effects on cardiovascular
disease (70-80 percent of people with diabetes die of cardiovascular
disease)(4). The calculated estimates of the costs of diabetes care
in Europe amount to 42.8 million International Dollars per year. (5)
About Lilly and Amylin
Through a long-standing commitment to diabetes care, Lilly
provides patients with breakthrough treatments that enable them to
live longer, healthier and fuller lives. Since 1923, Lilly has been
the industry leader in pioneering therapies to help health care
professionals improve the lives of people with diabetes, and research
continues on innovative medicines to address the unmet needs of
patients.
Lilly, a leading innovation-driven corporation, is developing a
growing portfolio of first-in-class and best-in-class pharmaceutical
products by applying the latest research from its own worldwide
laboratories and from collaborations with eminent scientific
organizations. Headquartered in Indianapolis, Ind., Lilly provides
answers -- through medicines and information -- for some of the
world's most urgent medical needs.
Amylin Pharmaceuticals is a biopharmaceutical company committed to
improving lives through the discovery, development and
commercialization of innovative medicines.
P-LLY
This press release contains forward-looking statements about
Amylin and Lilly. Actual results could differ materially from those
discussed or implied in this press release due to a number of risks
and uncertainties, including the risk that future clinical trials may
not replicate previous trial results; risks that exenatide may not
prove to be an important new therapeutic option, additional
indications for exenatide may not be received, or exenatide may be
affected by unexpected new data or technical issues. The potential
for exenatide may also be affected by government and commercial
reimbursement and pricing decisions, the pace of market acceptance
and any issues related to manufacturing and supply. These and
additional risks and uncertainties are described more fully in Amylin
and Lilly's most recently filed SEC documents such as their Annual
Reports on Form 10-K. Amylin and Lilly undertake no duty to update
these forward-looking statements.
Study shows exenatide improves blood sugar levels as effectively
as insulin glargine
REFERENCES
(1) Kolterman, O, Buse J, Fineman M, Gaines E, Heintz S, Bicsak T,
Taylor K, Kim D, Aisporna M, Wang Y, Baron A. Synthetic exendin-4
(exenatide) significantly reduces postprandial and fasting glucose in
subjects with type 2 diabetes. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology &
Metabolism. 2003; 88(7):3082-3089.
(2) The International Diabetes Federation, Prevalence / All
diabetes. Available at
http://www.eatlas.idf.org/Prevalence/All_diabetes/ .
(3) The International Diabetes Federation, Types of Diabetes.
Available at
http://www.eatlas.idf.org/Types_of_diabetes/#Type2diabetes
(4) The International Diabetes Federation, Complications.
Available at http://www.eatlas.idf.org/Complications/
(5) The International Diabetes Federation, Diabetes Atlas, Second
edition. The Economic Impact of Diabetes. 2003: 186.
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http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20040122/LILLYAMYLINLOGO )

Contact:

Scott MacGregor of Eli Lilly and Company, +1-317-651-1494,
+1-317-332-5557 (mobile)
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