Series: Cardiovascular outcome trials for diabetes drugs Degludec and DEVOTE

Miles Fisher

Address for correspondence: Professor Miles Fisher
Department of Diabetes, Endocrinology & Clinical Pharmacology, Glasgow Royal Infirmary, 84 Castle Street, Glasgow G4 0SF, UK
E-mail: miles.fisher@ggc.scot.nhs.uk

https://doi.org/10.15277/bjd.2021.302

Abstract

DEVOTE (Trial Comparing Cardiovascular Safety of Insulin Degludec versus Insulin Glargine in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes at High Risk of Cardio-vascular Events) was an FDA-mandated cardiovascular outcome trial and was the first – and at present the only – completed trial comparing two insulins. DEVOTE compared insulin degludec and insulin glargine (U100) in 7,637 people with type 2 diabetes with established cardiovascular disease, chronic kidney disease, or both, and older diabetic patients with increased cardiovascular risk. DEVOTE demonstrated non-inferiority for major cardiovascular events (MACE), a composite of death from cardiovascular causes, non-fatal myocardial infarction and non-fatal stroke, with a pre-specified non-inferiority margin of 1.3. At 24 months the mean HbA1c was similar in the two groups. Mean fasting plasma glucose was significantly lower in the degludec group than in the glargine group, and pre-specified severe hypoglycaemia was also significantly lower in the degludec group. DEVOTE satisfied the FDA cardiovascular safety requirements for new antidiabetic therapies.

Br J Diabetes 2021;21:113-115

Key words: diabetes, cardiovascular outcome trial, degludec, glargine

Introduction

Between 2008 and 2020 the licensing requirements for new antidiabetic drugs for the FDA in the USA usually required a dedicated cardiovascular outcome trial (CVOT) to satisfy criteria for cardiovascular safety.1 The primary endpoints were atherosclerotic events, either major cardiovascular events (MACE; a composite of cardiovascular death, non-fatal myocardial infarction or non-fatal stoke), or major cardiovascular events plus hospitalisation for unstable angina. The study design could either be the new antidiabetic drug versus placebo or the new drug versus an active comparator, and most CVOTs used a placebo comparator group. Dedicated CVOTs have been performed for several drugs within the dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4) inhibitor, glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist and sodium-glucose co-transporter-2 (SGLT2) inhibitor drug classes. The outcomes for the first seven of these CVOTs have previously been reviewed in this series, describing the primary endpoint plus important secondary outcomes and subsequent publications of data from subgroups and post hoc analyses.2–8 The ORIGIN trial, completed in 2012, was an investigator-initiated CVOT comparing glargine with placebo in subjects with type 2 diabetes or prediabetes.9 ORIGIN used a study design that was similar to FDA-mandated CVOTs. DEVOTE was the first FDA-mandated CVOT of an insulin and compared insulin degludec with glargine.10

Background

Degludec is an ultralong-acting once daily basal analogue insulin. It was recommended for approval by the European Medicines Agency in 2012 in formulations of 100 units/mL (U100) and 200 units/mL (U200). It was submitted to the FDA at a similar time, but the FDA advisory committee thought that there was a consistent and persistent signal of excess cardiovascular risk associated with degludec relative to comparators, based on meta-analysis of cardiovascular events from the Phase 2 and Phase 3 development programme. The FDA requested a dedicated double-blind CVOT with glargine as the comparator. Degludec was approved for use in the USA following a resubmission in 2015, based on interim analysis of data from DEVOTE, and the DEVOTE study was completed in 2017.

DEVOTE

A paper describing the design and baseline characteristics of DEVOTE was published in 2016.11 The principal DEVOTE results were presented in 2017 at a meeting of the American Diabetes Association with simultaneous publication in the New England Journal of Medicine.10 The design of the study and key baseline characteristics are shown in Box 1.

749 Fisher Box 1

In DEVOTE, the primary outcome of MACE, a composite of cardiovascular death, non-fatal myocardial infarction and non-fatal stroke, occurred in 8.5% of the degludec group and 9.3% of the glargine group, demonstrating non-inferiority with a pre-specified upper boundary of the 95% confidence interval less than 1.3, but not superiority. This satisfied the FDA cardiovascular safety criteria from 2008 where a post-marketing trial was required to definitely show that the upper bound of the two-sided 95% confidence interval for the estimated risk ratio was less than 1.3. There was no difference in an expanded primary composite of MACE plus hospitalisation for unstable angina, and there were no significant differences in all-cause mortality, cardiovascular death, non-fatal myocardial infarction or non-fatal stroke (Figure 1, Box 2). At 24 months the HbA1c concentrations were similar in the two groups, but fasting plasma glucose was significantly lower in the degludec group at 7.1±3.1 mmol/L versus 7.5±3.2 mmol/L in the glargine group. Pre-specified adjudicated severe hypoglycaemia, defined as an episode requiring the assistance of another person to actively administer carbohydrate or glucagon, or take corrective action, was significantly reduced in the degludec group (Box 2), as was nocturnal severe hypoglycaemia. Body weight increase by around 2 kg in both groups.

749 Fisher Figure 1749 Fisher Box 2

Other results from DEVOTE

Further publications from DEVOTE are detailed in Box 2. There has been much clinical interest in hospitalisation for heart failure as a secondary outcome in CVOTs. In DEVOTE, heart failure was not an adjudicated outcome and heart failure events were analysed using the standardised MedDRA query definition which is restricted to specific terminology, symptoms, signs and investigational features that are pathognomonic for cardiac failure.12 As might be expected, there was no difference in hospitalisation for heart failure events between the treatment groups. Prior heart failure was the strongest predictor of future heart failure events. Interestingly, shortly after an episode of severe hypoglycaemia, the risk of hospitalisation for heart failure increased significantly.

Discussion

The DEVOTE trial demonstrated no significant differences in cardiovascular events between insulin degludec and insulin glargine. Glargine was chosen as an active comparator in a double-blind trial as several of the phase 3 studies with degludec used open-label glargine as the comparator, and cardiovascular endpoint data were available for glargine from the ORIGIN trial.9 Although the ORIGIN trial was similar to an FDA-mandated trial, there were several key differences: in ORIGIN many subjects had pre-diabetes or newly diagnosed diabetes and the mean duration of diabetes for people with prior diabetes was 5 years. ORIGIN compared glargine with placebo, and cancers were also compared in addition to cardiovascular outcomes, microvascular outcomes, incident diabetes, hypoglycaemia and weight. The reduction in severe and nocturnal hypoglycaemia comparing degludec with glargine U100 that was seen in the DEVOTE trial mirrors similar differences in hypoglycaemic events that were demonstrated in the SWITCH 1 and SWITCH 2 trials, which compared rates of symptomatic hypoglycaemia with degludec versus glargine U100 in randomised double-blind trials in people with type 1 and type 2 diabetes, respectively.13,14

749 Fisher Key Messages

Conflict of interest The author reports personal fees from Allergan, Amgen, AstraZeneca, Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Eli Lilly, Mylan, NAPP, Novo Nordisk, Sanofi and from Servier outside the submitted work.

Funding None.

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