Switching from Dulaglutide to Tirzepatide: Subgroup Analysis of SURPASS-SWITCH
Summary
A subgroup analysis of the SURPASS-SWITCH trial confirms that switching from the GLP-1 agonist dulaglutide to the dual GIP/GLP-1 agonist tirzepatide produces consistently greater HbA1c and weight reductions across all baseline subgroups in type 2 diabetes.
A subgroup analysis of the SURPASS-SWITCH trial, published in BMJ Open Diabetes Research & Care, provides granular evidence supporting the clinical rationale for escalating from single-incretin to dual-incretin peptide therapy in type 2 diabetes.1
Background
The incretin-based therapy landscape has evolved rapidly. GLP-1 receptor agonists like dulaglutide became standard of care for T2D management, but the arrival of tirzepatide — a dual GIP/GLP-1 receptor agonist — raised a practical question: how should clinicians transition patients already on a GLP-1 agonist to this more potent peptide therapy?
SURPASS-SWITCH was designed to answer this directly.1
Trial Design
This phase IV, randomized, open-label, active-controlled, parallel-group, multicenter trial enrolled adults with:
- HbA1c ≥7.0% to ≤9.5%
- Stable dulaglutide dose for ≥6 months
- Stable oral antihyperglycemic medications (0–3 agents) for ≥3 months
- BMI ≥25 kg/m²
- Stable body weight
Participants were randomized to either continue dulaglutide or switch to tirzepatide, with follow-up at week 40.1
Subgroup Results
The prespecified subgroup analysis examined outcomes stratified by:
- Baseline HbA1c level
- Baseline BMI
- Race/ethnicity
- Duration of diabetes
- Age and sex
Key findings across all subgroups:
- HbA1c reduction was consistently greater with tirzepatide, with the largest absolute reductions in patients who started with higher baseline HbA1c
- Weight reduction was consistently greater with tirzepatide, with the most pronounced effects in non-Hispanic/non-Latino participants
- Safety profile was similar across all subgroups, with nausea and diarrhea remaining the most common adverse events1
The Peptide Therapeutics Angle
Tirzepatide's dual-agonist mechanism illustrates a broader trend in peptide drug design: polypharmacology through a single molecule. By engineering a peptide that engages both the GIP and GLP-1 receptors, tirzepatide achieves:
- Enhanced insulin secretion (GIP pathway)
- Superior appetite suppression (GLP-1 pathway)
- Synergistic weight loss effects not fully explained by either pathway alone
This approach — one peptide, multiple targets — is increasingly the template for next-generation incretin therapies, including retatrutide (triple agonist) and other pipeline candidates.1
Clinical Takeaways
For clinicians managing T2D patients on GLP-1 agonists:
- Switching is safe and effective — the transition from dulaglutide to tirzepatide is well-tolerated with predictable glycemic and weight benefits
- Benefits are consistent — subgroup heterogeneity was minimal, suggesting broad applicability
- Expect GI side effects — nausea and diarrhea are common during transition but generally manageable
- The dual-agonist advantage is real — GIP co-activation adds measurable benefit over GLP-1 alone
Footnotes
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Violante-Ortiz R, Rose L, Sharma P, Gomez Valderas E, Chivukula KK. "Safety and efficacy of switching from dulaglutide to tirzepatide across clinically relevant baseline characteristics in participants with T2D: subgroup analysis of SURPASS-SWITCH." BMJ Open Diabetes Res Care. 2026 Mar 30. PMID: 41912265. ↩ ↩2 ↩3 ↩4 ↩5
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