赛马鲁肽
相伴的
医学
2型糖尿病
安慰剂
糖尿病
肾脏疾病
杜拉鲁肽
内科学
置信区间
随机对照试验
内分泌学
艾塞那肽
病理
利拉鲁肽
替代医学
作者
Johannes F.E. Mann,Peter Rossing,George L. Bakris,Nicole A. Belmar,Heidrun Bosch‐Traberg,Robert S. Busch,David M. Charytan,Samy Hadjadj,Pieter Gillard,José Luis Górriz,Itamar Raz,Linong Ji,Kenneth W. Mahaffey,Vlado Perkovic,Søren Gregersen,Roland E. Schmieder,Richard E. Pratley,Katherine R. Tuttle
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41591-024-03133-0
摘要
Abstract People with type 2 diabetes and chronic kidney disease have a high risk for kidney failure and cardiovascular (CV) complications. Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists and sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitors (SGLT2i) independently reduce CV and kidney events. The effect of combining both is unclear. FLOW trial participants with type 2 diabetes and chronic kidney disease were stratified by baseline SGLT2i use ( N = 550) or no use ( N = 2,983) and randomized to semaglutide/placebo. The primary outcome was a composite of kidney failure, ≥50% estimated glomerular filtration rate reduction, kidney death or CV death. The risk of the primary outcome was 24% lower in all participants treated with semaglutide versus placebo (95% confidence interval: 34%, 12%). The primary outcome occurred in 41/277 (semaglutide) versus 38/273 (placebo) participants on SGLT2i at baseline (hazard ratio 1.07; 95% confidence interval: 0.69, 1.67; P = 0.755) and in 290/1,490 versus 372/1,493 participants not taking SGLT2i at baseline (hazard ratio 0.73; 0.63, 0.85; P < 0.001; P interaction 0.109). Three confirmatory secondary outcomes were predefined. Treatment differences favoring semaglutide for total estimated glomerular filtration rate slope (ml min −1 /1.73 m 2 /year) were 0.75 (−0.01, 1.5) in the SGLT2i subgroup and 1.25 (0.91, 1.58) in the non-SGLT2i subgroup, P interaction 0.237. Semaglutide benefits on major CV events and all-cause death were similar regardless of SGLT2i use ( P interaction 0.741 and 0.901, respectively). The benefits of semaglutide in reducing kidney outcomes were consistent in participants with/without baseline SGLT2i use; power was limited to detect smaller but clinically relevant effects. ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03819153 .
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