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Exenatide (Byetta, Bydureon)

Exenatide (synthetic exendin-4)

FDA Approved

Approved status applies to specific products, routes, and indications, not every use context discussed online.

An FDA-approved injectable medication (Byetta, Bydureon BCise) for type 2 diabetes, originally derived from a protein found in Gila monster saliva, that lowers blood sugar and promotes modest weight loss by mimicking a natural gut hormone. Also being studied for Parkinson's disease, with mixed clinical trial results so far.

21 studiesUpdated 2026-03-10Subcutaneous · Intravenous
Clinical bottom lineApproved

Exenatide (Byetta, Bydureon) is FDA-approved.

Use according to current labeled indication and prescribing guidance.

Safety Summary

GI adverse effects are the most commonly reported and are typically transient, resolving within the first 4-8 weeks of treatment. In the FDA label, nausea occurred in up to 44% of patients on combination therapy (18% placebo), vomiting in 13% (4% placebo), diarrhea in 13% (6% placebo). In the AUD trial PMID 36066977, nausea was 37.1% vs 15.4% placebo, vomiting 22.6% vs 7.7%, and injection site reactions 41.0% vs 0.0%. Injection site reactions with Bydureon typically present as small (1-2 cm), hard, mobile, skin-colored nodules that resorb within 6 weeks PMID 36066977. In the inpatient trial PMID 30679302, nausea/vomiting occurred in 10-11% of exenatide-treated groups vs 2% in basal-bolus insulin group. No pancreatitis events were reported across the filtered studies. Anti-exenatide antibodies develop in approximately 38-63% of patients depending on formulation and study, but in most patients do not correlate with reduced efficacy PMID 36066977. Drug-induced immune-mediated thrombocytopenia is a postmarketing finding with potentially fatal bleeding. Weight loss is a consistent pharmacological effect rather than adverse effect.

Clinical check-in

If real-world use or exposure is being considered, review potential interactions, contraindications, and monitoring needs with a licensed clinician rather than relying on summary copy alone.

See cited studies on this page (21)

Cited sources

Every claim on this page links to one of the 21 sources below. Identifiers are PubMed (PMID), ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT), or DOI; click through to the source of record before acting on a claim.

  1. 1NCT00082381ClinicalTrials.gov
  2. 2PMID 28781108PubMed
  3. 3PMID 35679098PubMed
  4. 4PMID 28205322PubMed
  5. 5PMID 29358950PubMed
  6. 6PMID 36066977PubMed
  7. 7PMID 26542264PubMed
  8. 8PMID 20332357PubMed
  9. 9PMID 30679302PubMed
  10. 10PMID 34732660PubMed
  11. 11PMID 40843067PubMed
  12. 12PMID 38027106PubMed
  13. 13PMID 20332358PubMed
  14. 14PMID 20357372PubMed
  15. 15PMID 32228379PubMed
  16. 16PMID 22067476PubMed
  17. 17PMID 27071367PubMed
  18. 18PMID 35432194PubMed
  19. 19PMID 28526033PubMed
  20. 20PMID 37524110PubMed
  21. 21PMID 37316311PubMed