| Literature DB >> 31572020 |
Ioanna Papakitsou1, George Vougiouklakis1, Moses S Elisaf2, Theodosios D Filippatos1.
Abstract
Dapagliflozin belongs in the family of sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitors and acts by reducing glucose reabsorption in the proximal tubule. The aim of this review is to present the differential pharmacology and clinical utility of dapagliflozin. Dapagliflozin is orally administered, has a long half-life of 12.9 hours and (similar to empagliflozin) is a much weaker SGLT1 inhibitor compared with canagliflozin. Dapagliflozin significantly decreases glycated hemoglobin and fasting glucose levels in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). The drug improves body weight, blood pressure, uric acid, triglycerides and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol. In the DECLARE-TIMI 58 trial, a large trial of 17,160 T2DM patients with established cardiovascular disease (CVD) or without established CVD but with multiple risk factors, dapagliflozin compared with placebo resulted in a significantly lower rate of the composite outcome of CVD death or hospitalization for heart failure (HHF); this effect was mainly due to a lower rate of HHF in the dapagliflozin group (HR: 0.73; 95%CI: 0.61-0.88), whereas no difference was observed in the rate of CVD death (HR: 0.98; 95%CI: 0.82-1.17). Moreover, dapagliflozin was noninferior to placebo with respect to major adverse CVD events. Dapagliflozin exerts beneficial effects on albuminuria. Additionally, in the DECLARE-TIMI 58 trial it significantly reduced the composite renal endpoint (40% decrease in glomerular filtration rate, end stage renal disease, or renal death) in both patients with established CVD and patients with multiple risk factors (overall HR: 0.53; 95%CI: 0.43-0.66). However dapagliflozin, like the other SGLT2 inhibitors, is associated with an increased risk of genital and urinary tract infections (usually mild mycotic infections) and acute kidney injury in cases of reduced extracellular volume. Dapagliflozin is a useful antidiabetic treatment which also exerts beneficial effects in the management of heart failure and diabetic kidney disease.Entities:
Keywords: adverse effects; cardiovascular disease; dapagliflozin; diabetes; kidney; sodium-glucose cotransporter 2
Year: 2019 PMID: 31572020 PMCID: PMC6756826 DOI: 10.2147/CPAA.S172353
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Pharmacol ISSN: 1179-1438
Pharmacokinetic characteristics of currently approved SGLT2 inhibitors
| Dapagliflozin | Empagliflozin | Canagliflozin | Ertugliflozin | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 hours | 1.5 hours | 1–2 hours | 1 hour | |
| 78% | 78% | 65% | 100% | |
| 91% | 86% | 99% | 93.6% | |
| 118 L | 73.8 L | 83.5 L | 86 L | |
| 12.9 hours | 12.4 hours | 13.1 hours | 17 hours | |
| 1.2 nM | 3.1 nM | 2.7 nM | 0.9 nM | |
| 1400 nM | 8300 nM | 710 nM | 1960 nM | |
| Glucuronidation | Glucuronidation | Glucuronidation | Glucuronidation | |
| 21% feces | 41% feces | 52% feces | 41% feces |
Abbreviations: SGLT2, sodium-glucose cotransporter 2; T1/2, drug half-life; IC50, the concentration needed to achieve 50% of inhibition.
Effects of dapagliflozin on anthropometric and metabolic variables in patients with type 2 diabetes
| Study | N | Duration | Carbohydrate variables | Anthropometric variables and blood pressure |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dapagliflozin in Asian patients with type 2 diabetes inadequately controlled on insulin with or without oral antihyperglycemic drugs | 272 | 24 weeks | HbA1c (%): −0.84, | Weight (kg): mean group difference): −1.38, |
| Efficacy and safety of dapagliflozin or dapagliflozin plus saxagliptin versus glimepiride as add-on to metformin in patients with type 2 diabetes | 939 | 52 weeks | HbA1c (%): −0.82 vs −1.20 vs −0.9 (drug combination vs glimepiride | Weight (kg): −3.5 vs −3.2 vs +1.8 (both |
| Efficacy and safety of dapagliflozin in T2DM patients with chronic kidney disease stage 3A: The DERIVE Study | 321 | 24 weeks | HbA1c (%): −0.37 vs −0.03, | Weight (kg): −3.17 vs −1.92, |
| Efficacy and safety of dapagliflozin in patients with inadequately controlled type 1 diabetes (DEPICT-1) | 833 | 24 weeks | HbA1c (%): –0.42, | Weight (Kg): –2.96 with dapagliflozin 5 mg and –3.72 with dapagliflozin 10 mg (both |
| Efficacy and safety of dapagliflozin in patients with inadequately controlled type 1 diabetes (the DEPICT-2 study) | 843 | 24 weeks | HbA1c (%): −0.37 | Weight(kg): |
| Dapagliflozin in the treatment of patients with type 2 diabetes presenting with high baseline A1C | 24 weeks | HbA1c (%): | Reductions in body weight >5%: −15.7% vs −18.9% vs −3.6% (both | |
| Dapagliflozin and cardiovascular outcomes in type 2 diabetes - DECLARE–TIMI 58 | 17,160 | 4.2 years | HbA1c (%): −0.42 |
Abbreviations: HbA1c, glycated hemoglobin; FBG, fasting plasma glucose; CGM, continuous glucose monitoring; T2DM, type 2 diabetes mellitus; TDDI, total daily dose of Insulin.
Effects of dapaliflozin on renal function and cardiovascular events in large prospective trials and meta-analyses
| Pooled analysis of 11 phase 3 studies with 10 mg dapagliflozin vs placebo | Dapagliflozin decreased albumin excretion in patients with baseline albuminuria regardless of eGFR ( |
| CVD-REAL study | lower rate of HHF (HR: 0.61; 95%CI: 0.51–0.73, lower rate of CV death (HR: 0.49; 95%CI: 0.41–0.57, |
| DECLARE-TIMI 58 | Primary outcomes
dapagliflozin was noninferior to placebo with respect to the primary safety outcome of MACE dapagliflozin did not result in a significantly lower rate of MACE (8.8% in the dapagliflozin group and 9.4% in the placebo group; HR: 0.93; 95%CI: 0.84–1.03, dapagliflozin was associated with a lower rate of CV death or HHF (4.9% vs 5.8%; HR: 0.83; 95%CI: 0.73–0.95, dapagliflozin was associated with a lower rate of adverse renal outcomes (HR: 0.76; 95%CI: 0.67–0.87) |
Abbreviations: SGLT2, sodium-glucose cotransporter 2; HHF, hospitalization for heart failure; CVD, cardiovascular disease; T2DM, type 2 diabetes mellitus; MACE, major adverse cardiovascular events.