DPP-4 inhibitors (Januvia, Tradjenta, Onglyza) are oral type 2 diabetes medications that work by boosting natural incretin hormones after meals. They are weight-neutral, do not cause hypoglycemia alone, are well tolerated with few side effects, and are a good option for patients who cannot tolerate GLP-1 agonists or SGLT2 inhibitors.
DPP-4 inhibitors are a class of oral type 2 diabetes medications known for their excellent tolerability and safety profile. While they are less potent than GLP-1 agonists or SGLT2 inhibitors in reducing HbA1c and weight, they offer a gentle, well-tolerated addition to diabetes regimens — particularly useful in elderly patients, those with kidney disease, or anyone who cannot tolerate other agents.
How They Work
After eating, your gut releases hormones called incretins — including GLP-1 (glucagon-like peptide-1) and GIP. These hormones stimulate insulin release from the pancreas and suppress glucagon. The enzyme DPP-4 quickly breaks these hormones down. DPP-4 inhibitors block this enzyme, allowing incretins to stay active longer — resulting in increased insulin when blood sugar is high and no insulin stimulation when blood sugar is normal.
The Main Medications
| Generic Name | Brand | Notable Feature |
|---|---|---|
| Sitagliptin | Januvia | Most studied; safe in heart failure |
| Linagliptin | Tradjenta | No renal dose adjustment needed — liver elimination |
| Saxagliptin | Onglyza | Avoid in heart failure (modest HF risk in trials) |
| Alogliptin | Nesina | Avoid in heart failure; generic available |
Effectiveness
- HbA1c reduction: approximately 0.5–0.8%
- Weight: neutral — no significant weight gain or loss
- Hypoglycemia: none when used alone (glucose-dependent mechanism)
- Particular strength: reducing post-meal glucose spikes
👴 Good for Elderly Patients: DPP-4 inhibitors are well tolerated in older patients — no hypoglycemia, no GI side effects, no volume depletion. Tradjenta (linagliptin) is especially useful in patients with kidney disease since it does not require dose adjustment at any level of kidney function.
Side Effects
- Nasopharyngitis (upper respiratory symptoms): The most common — slightly increased rate of runny nose and sore throat
- Pancreatitis (rare): A rare but reported adverse event — discontinue if abdominal pain develops
- Joint pain (arthralgia): Rare but reported; improves with discontinuation
- Heart failure (saxagliptin, alogliptin): Modest increase in HF hospitalizations seen in SAVOR-TIMI and EXAMINE trials — avoid these two agents in patients with existing heart failure
DPP-4 vs. GLP-1: Which Is Better?
| DPP-4 Inhibitor | GLP-1 Agonist | |
|---|---|---|
| Route | Oral (daily pill) | Injectable (weekly or daily) or oral semaglutide |
| HbA1c reduction | 0.5–0.8% | 1.0–2.0% |
| Weight effect | Neutral | Significant loss (5–20%) |
| GI side effects | Minimal | Nausea, vomiting (common initially) |
| CV benefit | Neutral (safe) | Yes — some agents |
| Best for | Patients who want an oral add-on with minimal side effects | Patients needing significant A1c/weight reduction |
Key Takeaways
- DPP-4 inhibitors boost natural incretin hormones — resulting in glucose-dependent insulin release with no hypoglycemia alone
- HbA1c reduction is modest (~0.5–0.8%); they are weight-neutral
- Very well tolerated with few side effects — an excellent option for elderly patients or those with kidney disease
- Tradjenta (linagliptin) requires no dose adjustment in kidney disease — unique among this class
- Avoid saxagliptin and alogliptin in patients with heart failure; sitagliptin and linagliptin are safe
- Much less potent than GLP-1 agonists, but oral, well-tolerated, and combinable with any other agent
Our Team Can Help
All five of our providers diagnose and manage endocrine conditions. Book with any member of our team:





Book an Appointment → or call 832-968-7003