Safety, Immunogenicity, and Glycemic Control of Insulin Aspart Biosimilar SAR341402 Versus Originator Insulin Aspart in People with Diabetes Also Using Insulin Glargine: 12-Month Results from the GEMELLI 1 Trial

SAR341402 (SAR-Asp) is a biosimilar/follow-on of the originator insulin aspart-NovoLog /NovoRapid (NN-Asp). This study investigated whether the efficacy, safety, and immunogenicity findings for SAR-Asp versus NN-Asp, observed over 6 months in people with type 1 (  = 497) or type 2 diabetes (  = 100)...

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Veröffentlicht in:Diabetes technology & therapeutics 2020-07, Vol.22 (7), p.516-526
Hauptverfasser: Garg, Satish K, Wernicke-Panten, Karin, Wardecki, Marek, Kramer, Daniel, Delalande, Francois, Franek, Edward, Sadeharju, Karita, Monchamp, Travis, Miossec, Patrick, Mukherjee, Bhaswati, Shah, Viral N
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:SAR341402 (SAR-Asp) is a biosimilar/follow-on of the originator insulin aspart-NovoLog /NovoRapid (NN-Asp). This study investigated whether the efficacy, safety, and immunogenicity findings for SAR-Asp versus NN-Asp, observed over 6 months in people with type 1 (  = 497) or type 2 diabetes (  = 100) treated with multiple daily injections in combination with insulin glargine (Lantus ), are maintained after 12 months. GEMELLI 1 was a multicenter, randomized, open-label, phase 3 study. Participants completing the initial 6-month treatment period continued on SAR-Asp or NN-Asp, as randomized, for a 6-month safety extension. Of the 597 participants randomized, 264 out of 301 (87.7%) and 263 out of 296 (88.9%) assigned to SAR-Asp and NN-Asp, respectively, completed 12 months of treatment. Improved glycemic control was sustained at 12 months in both treatment groups, with similar least-squares mean reductions in glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) from baseline (SAR-Asp: -0.25%; NN-Asp: -0.26%). Fasting plasma glucose and seven-point self-monitored plasma glucose profile changes, including postprandial glucose excursions, and changes in mealtime and basal insulin dosages were similar between groups. Safety and tolerability, including anti-insulin aspart antibodies (AIAs; incidence, prevalence, titers, cross-reactivity to human insulin), neutralizing antibodies (incidence, prevalence), hypoglycemia, and treatment-emergent adverse events (including hypersensitivity events and injection site reactions), were similar between groups. No relationship was observed between maximum individual AIA titers and change in HbA1c or insulin dose, hypoglycemia, or hypersensitivity reactions or between efficacy/safety measures and subgroups by presence or absence of treatment-emergent AIA. SAR-Asp and NN-Asp demonstrated similar efficacy and safety (including immunogenicity) in people with diabetes over 12 months of treatment.
ISSN:1520-9156
1557-8593
DOI:10.1089/dia.2020.0008