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Data presented at the EASD meeting demonstrated a significant mean placebo-subtracted reduction in A1C of 2.1 percent from a mean baseline A1C of 8.8 percent (primary analysis of all patients treated, p less than 0.001) with sitagliptin phosphate 50 mg twice daily and metformin 1,000 mg twice daily in patients as initial therapy. This study included another arm with sitagliptin phosphate and a lower dose of metformin and also monotherapy and placebo arms. Full results from this study for Janumet plus other data supporting sitagliptin phosphate will be presented next week at the 19th World Diabetes Congress in Cape Town, South Africa.
In the study presented at EASD, simultaneous treatment with sitagliptin phosphate and metformin was generally well tolerated and showed no meaningful differences in tolerability compared to metformin alone. Side effects of simultaneous treatment with sitagliptin phosphate 50 mg twice daily and metformin 1,000 mg twice daily compared to metformin 1,000 mg twice daily alone included diarrhea (9 percent vs. 10 percent, respectively), nausea (6 percent vs. 8 percent, respectively), abdominal pain/discomfort (3 percent vs. 5 percent, respectively) and vomiting (3 percent vs. 1 percent, respectively).
In studies of sitagliptin phosphate administered in combination with metformin, the most common side effects reported include nasopharyngitis, back pain, arthralgia and cough.