RESUMEN
AIMS: To confirm non-inferiority of insulin degludec/insulin aspart (IDegAsp) once-daily (OD) versus insulin glargine (IGlar) U100 ODâ¯+â¯insulin aspart (IAsp) OD for HbA1c after 26â¯weeks, and compare efficacy and safety between groups at W26â¯+â¯W38. METHODS: A 38-week, randomised, open-label, treat-to-target (HbA1câ¯<â¯7.0%) trial in adults with type 2 diabetes mellitus (on basal insulin⯱â¯oral antidiabetic drugs; HbA1c 7.0-10.0%). Randomisation (1:1): IDegAsp or IGlar U100â¯+â¯IAsp. Intensification to IDegAsp twice daily (BID) was permitted at W26â¯+â¯W32, or with additional IAsp injections at W26 (maximum IAsp BID) or W32 (maximum IAsp three-times daily). RESULTS: For W0-W26, mean percentage-change (standard deviation) HbA1c was: IDegAsp, -1.1 (0.9); IGlar U100â¯+â¯IAsp, -1.1 (0.8); estimated treatment difference: 0.07% (95% confidence interval [CI]: -0.06; 0.21) confirmed non-inferiority. At W26 and W38, target HbA1c achievement, and mean fasting and postprandial glucose were similar across groups. At W38, more subjects achieved target HbA1c without hypoglycaemia with IDegAsp (22.5%) than with IGlar U100â¯+â¯IAsp (21.1%), with significantly fewer nocturnal episodes (W0-W38, estimated rate ratio: 0.61 [95% CI: 0.40; 0.93]). Safety profiles were similar across treatment groups throughout. CONCLUSIONS: IDegAsp OD/BID are effective treatment intensification options versus multiple injection basal-bolus therapies, achieving similar glycaemic control, with significantly less nocturnal hypoglycaemia.