Drug Discovery & Development - September 21, 2010
NEW YORK (AP) - Sanofi-Aventis said that a study of its experimental diabetes drug showed better blood sugar control than placebo.
The study included 361 patients with type 2 diabetes who randomly received either lixisenatide, the company's diabetes injectable, or a sham treatment. Lixisenatide is part of the new GLP-1 class of diabetes drugs, which also includes Byetta, marketed by Eli Lilly & Co. and Amylin Pharmaceuticals Inc. The drugs help control blood sugar by increasing insulin production, slowing the body's absorption of sugar.
Safety concerns have hung over some drugs within the GLP-1 class, including Novo Nordisk's Victoza, which was approved with a warning about the risk for thyroid cancer and the requirement of a risk-mitigation strategy.
Sanofi studied its drug for three months, with patients taking a daily dose of lixisenatide.
Side effects with the drug were mild, and included nausea, the company said.
Date: September 20, 2010
Source: Associated Press
The study included 361 patients with type 2 diabetes who randomly received either lixisenatide, the company's diabetes injectable, or a sham treatment. Lixisenatide is part of the new GLP-1 class of diabetes drugs, which also includes Byetta, marketed by Eli Lilly & Co. and Amylin Pharmaceuticals Inc. The drugs help control blood sugar by increasing insulin production, slowing the body's absorption of sugar.
Safety concerns have hung over some drugs within the GLP-1 class, including Novo Nordisk's Victoza, which was approved with a warning about the risk for thyroid cancer and the requirement of a risk-mitigation strategy.
Sanofi studied its drug for three months, with patients taking a daily dose of lixisenatide.
Side effects with the drug were mild, and included nausea, the company said.
Date: September 20, 2010
Source: Associated Press
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