| Literature DB >> 33768493 |
Giuseppina Russo1, Matteo Monami2, Gianluca Perseghin3,4, Angelo Avogaro5, Pasquale Perrone Filardi6, Michele Senni7, Claudio Borghi8, Aldo P Maggioni9.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: There is no consensus on the optimal therapeutic approach to adopt in patients with newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) to prevent cardiovascular disease (CVD). The study aimed to gather an expert consensus on the hypoglycemic treatment and CV risk management in patients with newly diagnosed T2DM through the Delphi methodology.Entities:
Keywords: Delphi method; Expert consensus; GLP-1 receptor agonists; Glucose-lowering agents; SGLT2 inhibitors; Type 2 diabetes
Year: 2021 PMID: 33768493 PMCID: PMC8099991 DOI: 10.1007/s13300-021-01045-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes Ther ISSN: 1869-6961 Impact factor: 2.945
Characteristics of responders in the Delphi survey
| Characteristic | % or mean ± SD |
|---|---|
| Gender (female) | 64% |
| Mean age | 52.74 ± 9.85 |
| Age | |
| ≤ 45 years | 27% |
| 46–55 years | 27% |
| > 55 years | 45% |
| Italian region | |
| Northern Italy | 33% |
| Central Italy | 33% |
| Southern Italy | 35% |
Fig. 1Delphi survey flowchart
Delphi survey results
| Statement | Disagreement (score 1–2) | Agreement (score 3–5) | Reasoning behind consensus | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | A patient is defined “early” when the short duration of disease is known | 9% | 91% | Pathophysiological approach to define a condition with preserved beta cell function |
| 2 | A patient is defined “early” when he/she is still naïve to glucose-lowering therapy or is treated with metformin alone | 27% | 73% | Clinical approach to define a condition adequately controlled with metformin |
| 3 | A patient is defined “early” when there is no evidence of organ damage | 27% | 73% | Pathophysiological approach from a cardiovascular point of view to define a condition without organ damage |
| 4 | It is necessary to reach the lowest possible level of HbA1c since diagnosis, as long as there is no risk of hypoglycemia | 5% | 95% | According to guidelines in the management of “early patients” |
| 5 | It is necessary from the diagnosis using several agents in combination to reduce both HbA1c levels and cardiovascular risk | 25% | 75% | According to guidelines to support an approach based on both glycemic and cardiovascular targets |
| 6 | The reduction of cardiovascular risk is not strictly related to the reduction of HbA1c levels | 18% | 82% | HbA1c is not the only CV risk factor in T2DM |
| 7 | The choice to use GLP-1 receptor agonists or SGLT2 inhibitors is not related to the need to normalize HbA1c values | 20% | 80% | The choice of these glucose-lowering drugs is also based on the need to reduce CV risk |
| 8 | The distinction between primary and secondary cardiovascular prevention is commonly established based on a previous cardiovascular event | 16% | 84% | The definition reflects the common classification of cardiovascular prevention |
| 9 | The distinction between primary and secondary cardiovascular prevention is established based on the level of cardiovascular risk (low, intermediate, high) | 64% | 36% | The patients with T2DM can be at high risk despite no prior CV events |
| 10 | The definition of cardiovascular risk is based on the presence of coronary artery disease alone | 98% | 2% | The definition of cardiovascular risk is not only based on the presence of coronary artery disease |
| 11 | The definition of cardiovascular risk is based on the presence of obliterating arteriopathy of the lower limbs | 49% | 51% | The definition of cardiovascular risk is not necessarily limited to the peripheral vascular district |
| 12 | Patients with T2DM may have different levels of cardiovascular risk | 9% | 91% | According to ESC 2019 guidelines patients with T2DM can be classified as at moderate, high, and very high CV risk |
| 13 | The definition of a high-risk diabetic patient may be independent of the duration of the disease | 0% | 100% | Duration of T2DM is usually unknown and CV events may even precede the diagnosis of T2DM |
| 14 | An increased urinary albumin/creatinine ratio is a stronger predictor of cardiovascular disease than of progression of kidney damage | 9% | 91% | Albumin/creatinine ratio is a strong predictor of CVD |
| 15 | A treat-to-benefit approach involves the addition of a second glucose-lowering agent with proven cardiovascular benefits to metformin since diagnosis or in any case in an early stage of diabetes | 2% | 98% | According to available literature, a treat-to-benefit approach, aiming at reducing CV risk, suggests the addition of drugs with proven CV benefits, even at early stages |
| 16 | Treatment with metformin is not always the first choice in a patient with newly diagnosed T2DM and with concomitant cardiovascular disease | 24% | 76% | In accordance with ESC/EASD guidelines |
| 17 | GLP-1 receptor agonists and SGLT2 inhibitors represent a key strategy in the treat-to-benefit approach | 0% | 100% | Same as statement 15 |
| 18 | The decision to prescribe a glucose-lowering agent in add-on to metformin is based on the presence of a previous cardiovascular event | 42% | 58% | CVOT, ESC, and EASD/ADA consensus endorse the use of either GLP-1RA and SGLT2 inhibitors simultaneously to metformin in patients with new-onset type 2 diabetes with CVD, heart failure, and CKD, but these comorbidities are not the only determinant of the diabetologists’ therapeutic decision |
| 19 | The decision to prescribe a glucose-lowering agent in add-on to metformin is based on the level of cardiovascular risk (low, intermediate, high) | 15% | 85% | Therapeutic strategies are based on a global assessment of the CV risk of the patient |
| 20 | The decision to prescribe a glucose-lowering agent in add-on to metformin is based on the presence of microangiopathy | 24% | 76% | Therapeutic hypoglycemic strategies should be based on several aspects including the presence of complications not limited to microangiopathy |
| 21 | Sulfonylureas no longer have a place in the therapeutic algorithm for the treatment of T2DM | 24% | 76% | Although sulfonylureas are increasingly replaced by other drugs, current guidelines still allow their use as third- or fourth-line choice |
| 22 | The benefits of GLP-1 receptor agonists and SGLT2 inhibitors are limited to patients with T2DM and cardiovascular disease | 95% | 5% | Efficacy of GLP-1RAs and SGLT2 inhibitors was shown in patients with T2DM irrespective of the presence of previous CVD |
| 23 | In patients with high levels of HbA1c, the use of GLP-1 receptor agonists is more indicated | 24% | 76% | Higher potency demonstrated by GLP-1RAs in reducing HbA1c with respect to SGLT2 inhibitors |
| 24 | In order to prevent atherosclerotic disease, GLP-1 receptor agonists should be used at an earlier stage than SGLT2 inhibitors | 24% | 76% | According to available literature demonstrating anti-atherosclerotic properties of GLP-1RAs |
| 25 | In order to prevent heart failure, GLP-1 receptor agonists should be used at an earlier stage than SGLT2 inhibitors | 84% | 16% | According to available literature demonstrating a reduction of HF hospitalization with the use of SGLT2 inhibitors |
| 26 | Based on the data available to date, in patients with evidence of subclinical atherosclerotic disease, the use of GLP-1 receptor agonists is a first choice over SGLT2 inhibitors | 4% | 96% | Same as statement 24 |
| 27 | GLP-1 receptor agonists and SGLT2 inhibitors should only be used in patients who have been shown to have subclinical atherosclerotic disease | 96% | 4% | Same as statements 22 and 24 |
| 28 | In patients with T2DM the prevalence of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease is higher than the prevalence of heart failure | 31% | 69% | Atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease is the leading comorbidity in patients with T2DM |
| 29 | In patients with T2DM the risk of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease is greater than that of heart failure | 29% | 71% | The CVOT showed that the incidence rate of MACE is about threefold higher than that of HF |
| 30 | Regardless of their hypoglycemic efficacy, GLP-1 receptor agonists and SGLT2 inhibitors have a beneficial effect on multiple cardiovascular risk factors (weight, blood pressure, hyperlipidemia, hyperuricemia, inflammation) although the mechanisms and extent of effect on individual risk factors differ between the two drug classes | 0% | 100% | SGLT2 inhibitors and GLP-1RAs have well-documented effects on multiple CV risk factors |
ADA American Diabetes Association, CVD cardiovascular disease, CVOT cardiovascular outcomes trial, EASD European Association for the Study of Diabetes, ESC European Society of Cardiology, GLP-1 glucagon-like peptide 1, HbA1c glycated haemoglobin, HF heart failure, MACE major adverse cardiovascular event, SGLT2 sodium-glucose co-transporter 2, T2DM type 2 diabetes mellitus
| Current guidelines and consensus recommend the use of hypoglycemic drugs with proven CV benefit for patients with type 2 diabetes (T2DM) and established CVD, heart failure, and/or chronic kidney disease. |
| Clear recommendations for the treatment of patients with newly diagnosed T2DM to prevent cardiovascular disease are not yet available. |
| The study aims to provide expert opinion on the hypoglycemic treatment and CV risk management in patients with newly diagnosed T2DM. |
| Italian diabetologists consider the importance of adopting a personalized approach for patients with T2DM and CV risk factors. |
| GLP-1RAs and SGLT2 inhibitors were recognized as key strategies in the treat-to-benefit approach. |
| A paradigm shift should be implemented to focus clinicians’ attention not only on metabolic control but also on the long-term CV benefits, even at early stages. |