| Literature DB >> 32235471 |
José Luis Górriz1, María José Soler2, Juan F Navarro-González3, Clara García-Carro2, María Jesús Puchades1, Luis D'Marco1, Alberto Martínez Castelao4, Beatriz Fernández-Fernández5, Alberto Ortiz4, Carmen Górriz-Zambrano6, Jorge Navarro-Pérez7, Juan José Gorgojo-Martinez8.
Abstract
Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) represents the main cause of chronic kidney disease (CKD) and end-stage renal disease (ESKD), and diabetic kidney disease (DKD) is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in diabetes. Despite advances in the nephroprotective treatment of T2DM, DKD remains the most common complication, driving the need for renal replacement therapies (RRT) worldwide, and its incidence is increasing. Until recently, prevention of DKD progression was based around strict blood pressure (BP) control, using renin-angiotensin system blockers that simultaneously reduce BP and proteinuria, adequate glycemic control and control of cardiovascular risk factors. Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RA) are a new class of anti-hyperglycemic drugs shown to improve cardiovascular and renal events in DKD. In this regard, GLP-1RA offer the potential for adequate glycemic control in multiple stages of DKD without an increased risk of hypoglycemia, preventing the onset of macroalbuminuria and slowing the decline of glomerular filtration rate (GFR) in diabetic patients, also bringing additional benefit in weight reduction, cardiovascular and other kidney outcomes. Results from ongoing trials are pending to assess the impact of GLP-1RA treatments on primary kidney endpoints in DKD.Entities:
Keywords: GLP-1; chronic kidney disease; diabetic kidney disease
Year: 2020 PMID: 32235471 PMCID: PMC7231090 DOI: 10.3390/jcm9040947
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Risk factors for diabetic kidney disease.
| Risk Factor | Susceptibility | Initiation | Progression |
|---|---|---|---|
| Demographic | |||
| Older age |
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| Sex (men) |
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| Race (black, other ethnic minorities) |
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| Reduced renal mass |
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| Low birth weight |
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| Low socioeconomic level |
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| Hereditary | |||
| Family history of DKD |
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| Genetic kidney disease |
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| Systemic conditions | |||
| Hyperglycemia (poorly controlled) |
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| Obesity |
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| Hypertension (poorly controlled) |
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| Kidney injuries | |||
| Acute kidney injury |
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| Toxins, nephrotoxic drugs, mainly NSAIDs |
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| Smoking |
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| Urological problems (infection, obstruction) |
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| Dietary factors | |||
| High protein intake |
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DKD: diabetic kidney disease; NSAIDs: nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. Modified from Alicic [6].
Figure 1Potential mechanisms for the cardio-nephroprotective effect of GLP-1RA (modified from: Thomas [39] and Greco [40].
Key GLP-1RA RCTs with cardiovascular and renal endpoints.
| Drug (Ref) | Trial |
| Studied Population | Mean Duration | Composite Primary CV | Result | Individual Primary CV | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lixisenatide [ | ELIXA | 6068 | T2D and acute coronary syndrome | 25 m | 3P-MACE | Neutral | None | Neutral |
| Exenatide [ | EXSCEL | 14,752 | T2D with or without CVD | 3.2 y | 3P-MACE | Neutral | None | Neutral |
| Liraglutide [ | LEADER | 9340 | T2D and high CV risk | 3.8 y | 3P-MACE | 0.87 (0.78–0.97; | Death from any cause | 0.85 (0.74–0.97; |
| Semaglutide [ | SUSTAIN-6 | 3297 | T2D 50 y or more with established CVD, CHF or CKD G3 or higher or >60 y | 2.1 y | 3P-MACE | 0.74 (0.58–0.95; | Nonfatal stroke | 0.61 (0.38–0.99; |
| Albiglutide [ | HARMONY | 9469 | T2D and CVD or CV risk factors | 3.8 y | 3P-MACE | 0.78 (0.68–0.90; | Fatal or nonfatal myocardial infarction | 0.75 (0.61–0.90, |
| Dulaglutide [ | REWIND | 9901 | T2D and CVD or CV risk factors | 5.4 y | 3P-MACE | 0.88 (0.79–0.99; | Nonfatal Stroke | 0.76 (0.61–0.95; |
| Semaglutide [ | PIONEER-6 | 3183 | T2D and CVD or CV risk factors | 15.9 m | 3P-MACE | Neutral | None | Neutral |
| Exenatide [ | FREEDOM-CVO | 4000 | T2D and CV disease | UK | UK | UK | UK | UK |
T2D, type 2 diabetes mellitus; CVD, Cardiovascular disease; 3P-MACE, 3-point MACE (death from cardiovascular causes, nonfatal myocardial infarction, or nonfatal stroke); SC; subcutaneous, UK, unknown; y, years; m, Month; RCTs: randomized clinical trial.
Figure 2GLP-1RA RCT studies with known beneficial cardiovascular endpoints. Blue bars—percentage of 3-point MACE reduction with the intervention drug. Orange bars—percentage of individual primary cardiovascular endpoint reduction with the intervention drug. Three-point MACE, 3-point MACE; MI, fatal and nonfatal myocardial infarction.
Key GLP-1RA RCTs with kidney endpoints.
| Drugs | Trials | % | Composite Kidney Endpoint | Results | Individual Kidney Endpoint | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lixisenatide [ | ELIXA | 23 | NA | NA | New onset macroalbuminuria | 0.808 (0.660–0.991; |
| Exenatide [ | EXSCEL | 17 | 40% reduction in eGFR loss, onset of dialysis or transplantation, renal death and onset of macroalbuminuria | 0.85 (0.73–0.98; | None | Neutral |
| Liraglutide [ | LEADER | 23 | New onset macroalbuminuria, sustained serum creatinine duplication, initiation of renal replacement therapy or renal death | 0.78 (0.67–0.92; | New onset macroalbuminuria | 0.74 (0.37–0.77; |
| Semaglutide [ | SUSTAIN-6 | 28.5 | New onset macroalbuminuria, doubling serum creatinine reaching an eGFR <45 mL/min/1.73 m2, initiation of renal replacement therapy or renal death | 0.64 (0.46–0.88; | Persistent macroalbuminuria | 0.54 (0.60–0.91; |
| Albiglutide [ | HARMONY | 11 | UK | UK | UK | UK |
| Dulaglutide [ | REWIND | 22 | New onset macroalbuminuria, sustained decreased of eGFR <30% or the initiation of renal replacement therapy | 0.85 (0.77–0.93, | New onset macroalbuminuria; | 0.77 (0.68–0.87; |
| Semaglutide [ | PIONEER-6 | 27 | UK | UK | UK | UK |
| Exenatide [ | FREEDOM-CVO | UK | UK | UK | UK | UK |
NA, not apply; SC; subcutaneous; UK, unknown; RCTs: randomized clinical trial.
Figure 3GLP-1RA RCT studies with known beneficial renal endpoints. Blue bars—percentage of composite renal endpoint reduction with the intervention drug. Orange bars—percentage of individual renal endpoint reduction with the intervention drug. Renal, combined renal endpoint; MA, macroalbuminuria; ↓ eGFR ≥ 40%, Sustained decline in eGFR of ≥40%; ↓ eGFR ≥ 50%, Sustained decline in eGFR of ≥50%.