2012
DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(12)60205-0
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Insulin degludec, an ultra-longacting basal insulin, versus insulin glargine in basal-bolus treatment with mealtime insulin aspart in type 2 diabetes (BEGIN Basal-Bolus Type 2): a phase 3, randomised, open-label, treat-to-target non-inferiority trial

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Cited by 312 publications
(332 citation statements)
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“…Among type 2 diabetic patients, a previous phase III study has shown the non‐inferiority of degludec compared with glargine, and found that degludec reduced the overall frequency of hypoglycemia and nocturnal hypoglycemia14. In the treat‐to‐target study of degludec and glargine in insulin therapy‐naïve patients (with basal supported oral therapy), degludec allowed glycemic control, with a lower frequency of nocturnal hypoglycemia compared with glargine20, 21.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Among type 2 diabetic patients, a previous phase III study has shown the non‐inferiority of degludec compared with glargine, and found that degludec reduced the overall frequency of hypoglycemia and nocturnal hypoglycemia14. In the treat‐to‐target study of degludec and glargine in insulin therapy‐naïve patients (with basal supported oral therapy), degludec allowed glycemic control, with a lower frequency of nocturnal hypoglycemia compared with glargine20, 21.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…66 In type 2 diabetes, when compared to the glargine in a basal dose regimen only on equal glycemic control, it showed a significant reduction of all 24 h-daily, not only nocturnal, hypoglycemic episodes. 67 These data were well confirmed in elderly subjects too, those aged over 65 years, 68 normally more vulnerable to hypoglycemic episodes. In addition, more than 24 h halflife of this new insulin allows its administration not directly time-dependent, increasing the flexibility of insulin therapy, essential in the management of hyperglycemia in hospitalized patients.…”
Section: Preventing Hypoglycemiamentioning
confidence: 70%
“…The BEGIN Basal-Bolus trial was a 52-week, parallel-group, openlabel trial of patients treated with IDeg or Gla-100 QD plus mealtime insulin aspart, in which basal analog insulins were titrated with an aim of achieving blood glucose ~70-90 mg/dl (3.9-5.0 mmol/l) [47]. In this study, both confirmed hypoglycemia and confirmed nocturnal hypoglycemic events were significantly fewer with IDeg ( Table 1).…”
Section: Hypoglycemia In T2dmmentioning
confidence: 80%