| Literature DB >> 33843015 |
Marijana Tadic1, Carla Sala2, Sahrai Saeed3, Guido Grassi4, Giuseppe Mancia5, Wolfang Rottbauer6, Cesare Cuspidi4,7.
Abstract
New antidiabetic therapy that includes sodium-glucose co-transporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitors, glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor (GLP-1R) agonists, and dipeptidyl peptidase 4 (DPP-4) inhibitors showed significant benefit on cardiovascular outcomes in patients with and without type 2 diabetes mellitus, and this was particularly confirmed for SGLT2 inhibitors in subjects with heart failure (HF) with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF). Their role on patients with HF with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) is still not elucidated, but encouraging results coming from the clinical studies indicate their beneficial role. The role of GLP-1R agonists and particularly DPP-4 inhibitors is less clear and debatable. Findings from the meta-analyses are sending positive message about the use of GLP-1R agonists in HFrEF therapy and revealed the improvement of left ventricular (LV) diastolic function in HFpEF. Nevertheless, the relevant medical societies still consider their effect as neutral or insufficiently investigated in HF patients. The impact of DPP-4 inhibitors in HF is the most controversial due to conflicting data that range from negative impact and increased risk of hospitalization due to HF, throughout neutral effect, to beneficial influence on LV diastolic dysfunction. However, this is a very heterogeneous group of medications and some professional societies made clear discrepancy between saxagliptin that might increase risk of HF hospitalization and those DPP-4 inhibitors that have no effect on hospitalization. The aim of this review is to summarize current clinical evidence about the effect of new antidiabetic medications on LV diastolic function and their potential benefits in HFpEF patients.Entities:
Keywords: DPP-4 inhibitors; Diastolic function; GLP-1 receptor agonists; Heart failure; Left ventricular; SGLT2 inhibitors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33843015 PMCID: PMC9197886 DOI: 10.1007/s10741-021-10106-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Heart Fail Rev ISSN: 1382-4147 Impact factor: 4.654
SGLT2 inhibitors, left ventricular diastolic function and HFpEF
| Reference | Sample size | Medication | Follow-up period | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Verma et al. [ | 10 DM patients with normal LVEF | Empagliflozin | 3 months | Significant reduction in LV mass index and improved LV diastolic function (↑e′) |
| Cohen et al. [ | 20 DM patients with normal LVEF | Empagliflozin | 6 months | Reduction in LVEDV without differences in measures of LV mass, LVEF and cardiac fibrosis |
| Rau et al. [ | 42 DM patients with preserved LVEF (≈50%) | Empagliflozin | 3 months | Significantly improved LV diastolic function by reduction of E/e′, but did not change LV longitudinal strain |
| Lan et al. [ | 44 DM patients after ACS | Empagliflozin | 6 months | Reduction in LV mass index, LA volume index and increase in E/e′, withount change in LV longitudinal strain and LVEF |
| Eickhoff et al. [ | 36 DM with normal LVEF | Dapagliflozin | 12 weeks | Dapagliflozin did not have effect on LVEF, LV mass index and E/e′. The composite score showed LV diastolic function improvement of 19.8% |
| Zhang et al. [ | 4790 DM patients (meta-analysis) | Dapagliflozin Empagliflozin Tofogliflozin | - | SGLT-2 inhibitors are more significantly related with improved LVEDD and E/e′ |
| Hwang et al. [ | 202 DM patients with HFpEF, HFrEF and without HF | Dapagliflozin Empagliflozin Impragliflozin | 13 months | Significant decrease in LVEDD, improvement in LVEF, reduction in LV mass index, and E/e′ in HF patients. The improvements were more prominent in HF patients than those without HF, and in HFrEF patients than HFpEF patients |
| Shim et al. [ | 60 DM patients with LV diastolic dysfunction | Dapagliflozin | 24 weeks | Dapagliflozin did not significantly affect resting e′ velocity, E/e′, LV mass index, and left atrial volume index, but it significantly improved E/e′ during exercise, which reduced symptoms during effort |
| Matsutani et al. [ | 38 DM patients with normal LVEF | Canagliflozin | 3 months | LV diastolic function (E/e′) was significantly improved after canagliflozin usage |
| Otagaki et al. [ | 26 DM patients with normal LVEF | Tofogliflozin | 6 months | Significantly improved LVEF and increased E/e′ |
| Soga et al. [ | 58 patients with stable HFrEF | Dapagliflozin | 6 months | E/e′ significantly decreased, as well as LA volume index and LV mass index significantly decreased |
| Tanaka et al. [ | 53 DM patients with stable HFpEF | Dapagliflozin | 6 months | Dapagliflozin was found to be associated with improvement of LV longitudinal myocardial strain, which induced further improvement of LV diastolic function of DM patients with stable HFpEF |
| Sezai et al. [ | 35 DM patients with stable HFpEF | Canagliflozin | 12 months | Improved LV diastolic function |
ACS acute coronary syndrome DM diabetes mellitus HF heart failure HFpEF heart failure with preserved ejection fraction HFrEF heart failure with reduced ejection fraction LA left atrium LV left ventricle LVEF left ventricular ejection fraction SGLT2 sodium-glucose co-transporter 2 inhibitors
GLP-1R agonists and left ventricular diastolic function
| Reference | Sample size | Medication | Follow-up period | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bizino et al. [ | 49 DM patients | Liraglutide | 26 weeks | Reduced early LV diastolic filling and LV filling pressure, as well as decreased LVEF, but it did not change cardiac output and cardiac index. LVEF remained within normal range |
| Saponaro et al. [ | 37 DM patients | Liraglutide | 6 months | Significant improvement in LV diastolic function (E/A, E/e′) |
| Hiramatsu et al. [ | 139 DM patients | Liraglutide | 48 months | E/e′ and LA volume index significantly improved |
| Ida et al. [ | 592 DM patients (meta-analysis) | Liraglutide | - | Liraglutide caused a significant improvement in LV diastolic function in comparison with other antidiabetic drugs (sitagliptin, linagliptin, pioglitazone, rosiglitazone, voglibose, and glimepiride) |
| Lambadiari et al. [ | 60 DM patients | Liraglutide | 6 months | Improved arterial stiffness, LV myocardial strain, LV twisting and untwisting and NT-proBNP by reducing oxidative stress in patients with newly diagnosed DM, did not demonstrate significant improvement in LV diastolic function comparing with placebo |
| Kumarathurai et al. [ | 30 DM diabetes | Liraglutide | 24 weeks | Liraglutide therapy did not improve any diastolic function parameters in subjects with DM, CAD, and preserved LVEF |
| Scalzo et al. [ | 23 DM patients | Exanatide | 3 months | Improved significantly LV diastolic function and reduced arterial stiffness after 3 months of therapy, but did not improve functional exercise capacity |
| Zhang et al. [ | 4790 DM patients (meta-analysis) | Liraglutide Exanatide Albiglutide | - | GLP-1 agonists are more significantly associated with improved LVEF, LVESV and E/e′ |
CAD coronary artery disease DM diabetes mellitus GLP-1 glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor LA left atrial LVEF left ventricular ejection fraction LVESV left ventricular end-systolic volume
DPP-4 inhibitoris and left ventricular diastolic function
| Reference | Sample size | Medication | Follow-up period | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nogueira et al. [ | 35 DM patients | Sitagliptin | 24 weeks | Improvement in LV diastolic function was imporved in 75% of DM patients |
| Yamada et al. [ | 115 DM patients | Sitagliptin | 24 months | Improvement of LV diastolic function (reduction in E/e′), but no change in LVEF |
| Leung et al. [ | 75 DM patients | Sitagliptin Vildagliptin Saxagliptin | 12 months | Significant improvements in LV systolic, diastolic, and endothelial function |
| Kim et al. [ | 511,382 DM patients | Sitagliptin Linagliptin Vildagliptin Saxagliptin | 12 months | The risk for HF was reduced in all of the patients, in patients with baseline cardiovascular disease, and in patients without baseline cardiovascular disease compared with patients for sulfonylurea-treated patients. Sitagliptin and linagliptin showed statistically lower risk for hospitalization for HF than for sulfonylurea |
| McMurrey et al. [ | 254 DM patients | Vildagliptin | 52 weeks | No major effect on LVEF but increased LV volumes |
| Zhang et al. [ | 4790 DM patients (meta-analysis) | Sitagliptin Linagliptin Vildagliptin Teneligliptin Alogliptin Anagliptin | - | DPP-4 inhibitors are more strongly associated with a negative impact on LV end-diastolic volume |
DPP-4 dipeptidyl peptidase 4 DM diabetes mellitus LV left ventricle LVEF left ventricular ejection fraction