| Literature DB >> 33474707 |
Tope Olufade1, Lois Lamerato2, Juan José García Sánchez3, Like Jiang4, Joanna Huang4, Stephen Nolan3, Janani Rangaswami5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The DAPA-CKD trial assessed dapagliflozin in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) with or without type 2 diabetes (T2D). To aid interpretation of results, renal and cardiovascular outcomes plus healthcare resource utilization (HCRU) and costs were assessed in a real-world population similar to that of DAPA-CKD.Entities:
Keywords: Albuminuria; Chronic kidney disease; Dapagliflozin; Healthcare resource utilization; Heart failure; Real-world outcomes; Type 2 diabetes
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33474707 PMCID: PMC7889671 DOI: 10.1007/s12325-020-01609-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Ther ISSN: 0741-238X Impact factor: 3.845
Fig. 1Study timeline. eGFR estimated glomerular filtration rate, HCRU healthcare resource utilization
Fig. 2Patient attrition diagram. eGFR estimated glomerular filtration rate, ESKD end-stage kidney disease, PKD polycystic kidney disease, T1D type 1 diabetes, UACR urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio. aBaseline defined as 12 months pre-index date
Baseline demographicsa and characteristics stratified by UACR category
| UACR category (mg/g) | 0–29 ( | 30–199 ( | 200–5000 ( | Total ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender, | |||||
| Male | 1885 (62.2) | 679 (22.4) | 466 (15.4) | 3030 (46.2) | < 0.0001 |
| Female | 2446 (69.4) | 675 (19.1) | 406 (11.5) | 3527 (53.8) | |
| Age (years), mean (SD) | 63.1 (8.2) | 63.3 (8.7) | 61.4 (9.4) | 62.9 (8.5) | < 0.0001 |
| CKD stage, | |||||
| 2 | 2691 (73.2) | 676 (18.4) | 309 (8.4) | 3676 (56.1) | < 0.0001 |
| 3a | 1275 (62.6) | 466 (22.9) | 297 (14.6) | 2038 (31.1) | |
| 3b | 337 (45.7) | 186 (25.2) | 215 (29.1) | 738 (11.3) | |
| 4 | 28 (27.7) | 26 (24.8) | 51 (48.6) | 105 (1.6) | |
| eGFR (ml/min/1.73 m2), mean (SD) | 61.5 (10.7) | 58.0 (12.3) | 52.8 (14.2) | 59.6 (11.9) | < 0.0001 |
| UACR (mg/g), mean (SD) | 10.5 (6.8) | 76.8 (41.3) | 1086.8 (1040.5) | 167.3 (524) | < 0.0001 |
| Serum potassium, | 3966 | 1245 | 801 | 6012 | |
| mmol/l, mean (SD) | 4.3 (0.4) | 4.4 (0.5) | 4.4 (0.5) | 4.3 (0.4) | < 0.05 |
| HbA1c, | 3036 | 916 | 516 | 4468 | |
| %, mean (SD) | 7.3 (1.4) | 7.8 (1.8) | 8.2 (2.0) | 7.5 (1.6) | < 0.001 |
| Comorbidities, | |||||
| T2D | 3828 (88.4) | 1196 (88.3) | 752 (86.2) | 5776 (88.1) | NS |
| Heart failure | 225 (5.2) | 120 (8.9) | 122 (14.0) | 467 (7.1) | < 0.001 |
| T2D and heart failure | 205 (4.7) | 115 (8.5) | 115 (13.2) | 435 (6.6) | < 0.001 |
| Hypertension | 3130 (72.3) | 987 (72.9) | 670 (76.8) | 4787 (73.0) | < 0.05 |
| Hypertensive nephropathy | 156 (3.6) | 111 (8.2) | 152 (17.4) | 419 (6.4) | < 0.001 |
| Glomerulonephritis | 11 (0.3) | 7 (0.5) | 25 (2.9) | 43 (0.7) | < 0.001 |
| Myocardial infarction | 53 (1.2) | 29 (2.1) | 33 (3.8) | 115 (1.8) | < 0.001 |
| Stroke | 45 (1.0) | 18 (1.3) | 21 (2.4) | 84 (1.3) | < 0.01 |
| Peripheral artery disease | 152 (3.5) | 71 (5.2) | 59 (6.8) | 282 (4.3) | < 0.001 |
| Coronary artery disease | 533 (12.3) | 174 (12.9) | 127 (14.6) | 834 (12.7) | NS |
| Dyslipidemia | 2513 (58.0) | 723 (53.4) | 441 (50.6) | 3677 (56.1) | < 0.001 |
CKD chronic kidney disease, eGFR estimated glomerular filtration rate, HbA1c glycated hemoglobin, NS not significant, SD standard deviation, T2D type 2 diabetes, UACR urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio
aBaseline defined as 12 months pre-index date
bPercentages calculated using the total for that row as denominator
cPercentages calculated using the total for that column
dCKD stages 2, 3a, 3b and 4: eGFR 60–75, 45 to < 60, 30 to < 45 and 25 to < 30 ml/min/1.73 m2, respectively
eComorbidities based on diagnoses codes for clinical encounters. Significance calculated using chi-square analysis for categorical variables and analysis of variance for mean age
Fig. 3Clinical outcomes at 5 years. CKD chronic kidney disease, eGFR estimated glomerular filtration rate, HF heart failure, MI myocardial infarction, NS not significant, T2D type 2 diabetes, UACR urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio. aSecond eGFR > 50% decline at least 28 days apart. Cardiac outcomes (MI, stroke and HF) include patients with any encounter during 5 years of follow-up. Hospitalization outcomes include patients with a hospitalization for the given outcome during 5 years of follow-up. Statistical significance of patient outcomes calculated using chi-square analysis. *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001, ****P < 0.0001. Axes cropped at 40% to enhance visual assessment. Patients were excluded if they had no eGFR or clinical encounter in the fifth year of follow-up
Fig. 4Healthcare resource utilization and costs. eGFR estimated glomerular filtration rate, HF heart failure, NS not significant, T2D type 2 diabetes, UACR urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio. Utilization rates are the total observed utilization divided by follow-up time and reported as an annual rate. Healthcare resource utilization/costs cover the entire follow-up period. Annualized charges are per patient. *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001, ****P < 0.0001. Statistical significance calculated using analysis of variance
| The DAPA-CKD trial assessed dapagliflozin in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) with and without type 2 diabetes. |
| To aid interpretation of the DAPA-CKD results, renal and cardiovascular outcomes, plus healthcare resource utilization (HCRU) and costs, were assessed in a real-world population reflective of the DAPA-CKD trial. |
| Incidence of adverse clinical outcomes (overall renal composite outcome, heart failure, myocardial infarction, stroke, mortality) increased with UACR and was highest for the DAPA-CKD-like cohort vs. lower UACR categories. |
| The DAPA-CKD-like cohort also had significantly higher annualized per-patient healthcare costs, rates of hospital admission and rates of outpatient specialist visits vs. the lowest UACR category. |
| The significant adverse renal and cardiovascular outcomes observed, particularly in the DAPA-CKD-like cohort, represent a substantial burden resulting in increased mortality and HCRU and costs, demonstrating the need for additional treatment options. |