Keep in mind that up to 47% of those on dialysis are also diabetics with hypertension coming in second. Thus anything pertaining to diabetes has almost a 50:50 chance of applying to those of us also on dialysis. I am one of this group thus my interest in all things diabetic. I have been treating diabetes for roughly 40 years and have been on dialysis less than one. Thus my sensitivity to advances in the treatment of diabetes.

In a June 24, 2023 article in The New England Journal of Medicine by Julio Rosenstock, MD et al titled “Weekly Codec Versus Daily Glargine U100 in Type 2 Diabetes without Previous Insulin,” research sponsored by Nova Nordisk was reported. Some clarification of terms first. “Week Codec” is a new weekly basal injection under development by Nova. This article reports on a phase of human testing under the rules and regulations of the USA’s FDA. Another definition: a basal injection for Type 2 diabetes is a long-lasting injection. An example of such an injection is Glargine U100 sold under the brand name “Lantus” by Lilly which I inject daily.

As is usual in these trials, the null hypothesis of no difference in paired groupings between those receiving the Weekly Codec and those receiving Lantus was made. The following conclusions are copied directly from the report’s end:

“the findings of the current trial highlight the totality of evidence for glycemic control with icodec. Among persons with long-standing diabetes taking noninsulin glucose-lowering agents including GLP-1 receptor agonists and SGLT-2 inhibitors, those who received icodec were more likely to reach a glycated hemoglobin level (That’s A1C) below 7% than those who received glargine U100, and they spent more time in the target glycemic range and were more likely to reach a glycated hemoglobin level below 7% without clinically significant or severe hypoglycemia (low blood sugar). In this phase 3a trial, we found that once-weekly insulin icodec offered better glycemic control than once-daily insulin glargine U100 in persons with type 2 diabetes who had not previously received insulin.”

While this is but one component of the march by Nova to gain full approval of Weekly icodec for treatment of Type 2 diabetics, it looks like its release in the future looks probably and perhaps we can move from daily injections of Lantus to weekly injections of icodec? I would be for that.