Medication Switch Guide

Switching from Liraglutide to Exenatide: Dose Conversion & Timeline

Whether you're switching because of side effects, insurance changes, or a desire to optimize your response, transitioning from Liraglutide to Exenatide requires a structured approach. This guide summarizes the clinical evidence and practical protocol.

⚠️ Medical Disclaimer

This page is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. GLP-1 medications are prescription drugs. Discuss all treatment decisions with a licensed healthcare provider who knows your complete medical history. Individual results vary significantly from clinical trial averages.

🔔 Always switch under prescriber supervision

Switching GLP-1 medications should be guided by a licensed clinician. Do not self-transition. Dose equivalence tables are approximations — individual response varies.

Why Switch from Liraglutide to Exenatide?

Common clinical reasons for switching include:

Dose Equivalence Table

There are no formally established dose equivalence conversions between most GLP-1 medications — each drug has its own dose-response curve and receptor binding profile. The general approach is to restart at the lowest titration dose of the new agent regardless of dose achieved on the prior agent.

When on Liraglutide Start Exenatide at Rationale
Any dose5.0 mg (weekly)Standard re-titration recommended for all switches
3.0 mg (max dose)5.0 mg → escalate per scheduleEven patients at maximum doses re-titrate from the starting dose

Washout Period

Transitioning from daily to weekly injection: no formal washout period needed. Take the last daily dose, then start weekly dosing the following day or on your selected injection day.

Liraglutide has a half-life of approximately 13 hours. Exenatide has a half-life of approximately 2.4 hours. These pharmacokinetic differences influence the transition protocol but rarely require a true drug-free washout period for GLP-1 class switches.

What to Expect: First 4 Weeks on Exenatide

Patients switching to a new GLP-1 agent often experience a re-emergence of GI side effects (nausea, diarrhea, constipation) during the re-titration period, similar to what occurred when starting the first medication. This is normal and expected — the body is adapting to a new receptor agonist profile.

Monitoring After Switching

Drug Comparison: Liraglutide vs Exenatide

FeatureLiraglutideExenatide
MechanismGLP-1 receptor agonistGLP-1 receptor agonist
Weight Loss (%)8.0%3.7%
FrequencyDailyWeekly
FDA StatusApproved 2014Approved 2005

For a full comparison, see our Liraglutide vs Exenatide comparison page.

📅 Dose Schedule Calculator

Plan your Exenatide titration schedule after switching from Liraglutide.

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