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Phase 4 Completed N=312 Randomized Other

A Study Comparing the Dulaglutide Pen and the Semaglutide Pen

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03724981 ↗
Enrolled (actual)
312
Serious AEs
Results posted
Apr 2020
Primary outcomePrimary: Participant Preference Between 2 Injection Devices Based on Global Preference Item — 87.7; 80.6; 2.6; 4.5 percentage of participants — p=<0.0001
◆ Published Evidence
No publication linked

No peer-reviewed publication reporting this trial's results has been linked yet. This can indicate results are unpublished — a known publication-bias signal. We re-check periodically.

Summary

In this study participants will try out two different types of drug injection pens (dulaglutide and semaglutide) on a practice pad and decide which device they prefer. No study drug will be administered.

Outcome Measures

OutcomeResultp-value
PRIMARY
Participant Preference Between 2 Injection Devices Based on Global Preference Item
87.7; 80.6; 2.6; 4.5; 9.7; 14.8 <0.0001 sig
SECONDARY
Participant Preference Between 2 Injection Devices Based on Ease of Use
87.1; 86.5; 5.2; 7.7; 7.7; 5.8 <0.0001 sig

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Diagnosed with type 2 diabetes
  • Self-injection naïve to all injectable treatment (for example, diabetes therapies and other medical conditions)
  • Injection naïve to performing all injectable treatment (for example, diabetes therapies and other medical conditions) to others

Exclusion Criteria

  • Currently diagnosed with gestational diabetes and/or type 1 diabetes
  • Cognitive or physical difficulties that could interfere with ability to understand the training, perform the injection tasks, or complete the study questionnaires as judged by the investigator
  • Is a health care practitioner who is trained in giving injections
View full record on ClinicalTrials.gov →

Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03724981). Outcome figures and adverse-event rates are extracted automatically from the registry's posted results and are provided for clinician reference, not as a substitute for the primary publication. Informational only — not medical advice.

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