From the Journals

Diabetes duration linked to increasing heart failure risk


 

FROM JACC HEART FAILURE

Diabetes duration may signal need for an SGLT2 inhibitor

“With emerging novel treatments like the SGLT2 [sodium-glucose cotransporter 2] inhibitors for preventing heart failure hospitalizations and deaths in patients with type 2 diabetes, this is a timely analysis,” Dr. Eckel said in an interview.

“There is no question that with increased duration of type 2 diabetes” the need for an agent from the SGLT2-inhibitor class increases. Although, because of the proven protection these drugs give against heart failure events and progression of chronic kidney disease, treatment with this drug class should start early in patients with type 2 diabetes, he added.

Dr. Echouffo-Tcheugui and his coauthors agreed, citing two important clinical take-aways from their findings:

First, interventions that delay the onset of diabetes may potentially reduce incident heart failure; second, patients with diabetes might benefit from cardioprotective treatments such as SGLT2 inhibitors, the report said.

“Our observations suggest the potential prognostic relevance of diabetes duration in assessing heart failure,” the authors wrote. Integrating diabetes duration into heart failure risk estimation in people with diabetes “could help refine the selection of high-risk individuals who may derive the greatest absolute benefit from aggressive cardioprotective therapies such as SGLT2 inhibitors.”

The analysis also identified several other demographic and clinical factors that influenced the relative effect of diabetes duration. Longer duration was linked with higher rates of incident heart failure in women compared with men, in Blacks compared with Whites, in people younger than 65 compared with older people, in people with an A1c of 7% or higher, and in those with a body mass index of 30 kg/m2 or greater.

The ARIC study and the analyses run by Dr. Echouffo-Tcheugui and his coauthors received no commercial funding. Dr. Echouffo-Tcheugui and Dr. Eckel had no relevant disclosures.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Dapagliflozin’s cost-effectiveness ‘intermediate’ for HFrEF
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Medtronic yanks Heartware VAD, calls for halt to new implants
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Evidence builds for iPhone 12 interference with cardiac devices
MDedge Emergency Medicine
First risk score to predict bleeding risk after TAVR
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Bariatric surgery tied to fewer HFpEF hospitalizations
MDedge Emergency Medicine
AHA: Don’t delay COVID shot while CDC reviews myocarditis cases
MDedge Emergency Medicine
FDA to add myocarditis warning to mRNA COVID-19 vaccines
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Meta-analysis supports cardiovascular benefits of EPA
MDedge Emergency Medicine
St. Jude to pay $27 million to end DOJ suit over faulty ICDs
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Dapagliflozin safe, protective in advanced kidney disease
MDedge Emergency Medicine