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Patient support from the start

Victoza® tools and support help you show patients how to use the Victoza® Pen.

Education is important for helping patients feel comfortable with taking a new medication. In a usability study that included people with type 2 diabetes, more than 90% of subjects considered the Victoza® Pen easy to learn how to use when demonstrated into a pillow.1* This section offers some tips and tools that can help you talk with your patients about starting Victoza® and provide them the support they need.

Victoza samples

Start with a free Victoza® sample

Patient Starter Kit

Send patients home with a Victoza® Patient Starter Kit

VictozaCare™ patient support

Help patients join VictozaCare™


For insurance information, contact the Novo Nordisk Reimbursement Help Line, 1-888-727-6500, and select "Option 2."

*A randomized, multicenter, open-label, single-visit test to evaluate the usability of 3 Victoza® pens following subject review of the Victoza® Pen Instructions for Use. Subjects with uncorected visual impairment, limited manual dexterity, motor impairment, mental incapacity, or psychiatric disorder were excluded. Eligible subjects (N=90) were randomized to 1 of 6 pen/dose combinations and asked to read the Victoza® Instructions for Use and independently perform a specified injection into a foam pillow. After read the Victoza® Pen instrctions for Use and completely the task assigned, subjects completed the Victoza® Usability Questionnaire. The questionnaire included question pertaining to how easy or difficult it was to prepare the pen, dial the dose and read the scale, deliver the dose, and learn to use the pen.1

Related content

Contact a VictozaCare™ Specialist

For more information about Victoza® call
1-877-4 VICTOZA(1-877-484-2869) Monday through Friday, 8:30 am to 6:00 pm EST, or e-mail us for more information.



Request a Novo Nordisk CDE

Now you can request a CDE to visit your office. Call 1-877-4 VICTOZA (1-877-484-2869), Monday through Friday, 8:30 am to 6:00 pm EST, to learn more.



 

Indications and Usage

Victoza® is indicated as an adjunct to diet and exercise to improve glycemic control in adults with type 2 diabetes mellitus.

Because of the uncertain relevance of the rodent thyroid C-cell tumor findings to humans, prescribe Victoza® only to patients for whom the potential benefits are considered to outweigh the potential risk. Victoza® is not recommended as first-line therapy for patients who have inadequate glycemic control on diet and exercise.

In clinical trials of Victoza®, there were more cases of pancreatitis with Victoza® than with comparators. Victoza® has not been studied sufficiently in patients with a history of pancreatitis to determine whether these patients are at increased risk for pancreatitis while using Victoza®. Use with caution in patients with a history of pancreatitis.

Victoza® is not a substitute for insulin. Victoza® should not be used in patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus or for the treatment of diabetic ketoacidosis, as it would not be effective in these settings.

The concurrent use of Victoza® and insulin has not been studied.

Important Safety Information

Liraglutide causes dose-dependent and treatment-duration-dependent thyroid C-cell tumors at clinically relevant exposures in both genders of rats and mice. It is unknown whether Victoza® causes thyroid C-cell tumors, including medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC), in humans, as human relevance could not be ruled out by clinical or nonclinical studies. Victoza® is contraindicated in patients with a personal or family history of MTC and in patients with Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia syndrome type 2 (MEN 2). Based on the findings in rodents, monitoring with serum calcitonin or thyroid ultrasound was performed during clinical trials, but this may have increased the number of unnecessary thyroid surgeries. It is unknown whether monitoring with serum calcitonin or thyroid ultrasound will mitigate human risk of thyroid C-cell tumors. Patients should be counseled regarding the risk and symptoms of thyroid tumors.

If pancreatitis is suspected, Victoza® should be discontinued. Victoza® should not be re-initiated if pancreatitis is confirmed.

When Victoza® is used with an insulin secretagogue (e.g. a sulfonylurea) serious hypoglycemia can occur. Consider lowering the dose of the insulin secretagogue to reduce the risk of hypoglycemia.

There have been no studies establishing conclusive evidence of macrovascular risk reduction with Victoza® or any other antidiabetic drug.

The most common adverse reactions, reported in ≥5% of patients treated with Victoza® and more commonly than in patients treated with placebo, are headache, nausea, diarrhea, and anti-liraglutide antibody formation. Immunogenicity-related events, including urticaria, were more common among Victoza®-treated patients (0.8%) than among comparator-treated patients (0.4%) in clinical trials.

Victoza® has not been studied in type 2 diabetes patients below 18 years of age and is not recommended for use in pediatric patients.

Victoza® should be used with caution in patients with renal impairment and in patients with hepatic impairment.

Counsel patients regarding the risk for MTC and the symptoms of thyroid tumors (e.g. a mass in the neck, dysphagia, dyspnea, or persistent hoarseness).

Patients with thyroid nodules noted on physical examination or neck imaging obtained for other reasons should be referred to an endocrinologist for further evaluation.

Although routine monitoring of serum calcitonin is of uncertain value in patients treated with Victoza®, if serum calcitonin is measured and found to be elevated, the patient should be referred to an endocrinologist for further evaluation.

After initiation of Victoza®, and after dose increases, observe patients carefully for signs and symptoms of pancreatitis (including persistent severe abdominal pain, sometimes radiating to the back and which may or may not be accompanied by vomiting).

In the clinical trials of at least 26 weeks duration, hypoglycemia requiring the assistance of another person for treatment occurred in 7 Victoza®-treated patients and in no comparator-treated patients. Six of these 7 patients treated with Victoza® were also taking a sulfonylurea.

The incidence of withdrawal due to adverse events was 7.8% for Victoza®-treated patients and 3.4% for comparator-treated patients in the 5 controlled trials of 26 weeks duration or longer. This difference was driven by withdrawals due to gastrointestinal adverse reactions, which occurred in 5.0% of Victoza®-treated patients and 0.5% of comparator-treated patients. The most common adverse reactions leading to withdrawal for Victoza®-treated patients were nausea (2.8% versus 0% for comparator) and vomiting (1.5% versus 0.1% for comparator).

Victoza® causes a delay in gastric emptying, and thereby has the potential to impact absorption of concomitantly administered oral medications. Caution should be exercised when oral medications are concomitantly administered with Victoza®.

Victoza® slows gastric emptying. Victoza® has not been studied in patients with pre-existing gastroparesis.

In a 52-week monotherapy study (n=745), the adverse reactions reported in ≥5% of patients treated with Victoza® or ≥5% of patients treated with glimepiride were nausea (28.4% vs 8.5%), diarrhea (17.1% vs 8.9%), vomiting (10.9% vs 3.6%), constipation (9.9% vs 4.8%), upper respiratory tract infection (9.5% vs 5.6%), headache (9.1 vs 9.3%), influenza (7.4% vs 3.6%), urinary tract infection (6.0% vs 4.0%), dizziness (5.8% vs 5.2%), sinusitis (5.6% vs 6.0%), nasopharyngitis (5.2% vs 5.2%), back pain (5.0% vs 4.4%), and hypertension (3.0% vs 6.0%).

Please see Prescribing Information.

Models throughout are for illustrative purposes only.


Reference
  1. Data on file. Novo Nordisk Inc, Princeton, NJ.

This website is intended for US health care professionals. International residents, please go to www.novonordisk.com.