Applied Evidence

How to use type 2 diabetes meds to lower CV disease risk

Author and Disclosure Information

 

References

The incidence of MACE-3 was significantly reduced among patients treated with semaglutide (P = .02) after median followup of 2.1 years. The expanded composite outcome (death from CV causes, nonfatal MI, nonfatal stroke, coronary revascularization, or hospitalization for unstable angina or HF), also showed a significant reduction with semaglutide (P = .002), compared with placebo. There was no difference in the overall hospitalization rate or rate of death from any cause.

EXSCEL. The Exenatide Study of Cardiovascular Event Lowering trial (EXSCEL)17,18 was a phase III/IV, double-blind, pragmatic placebo-controlled study of 14,752 patients at any level of CV risk, for a median 3.2 years. The study population was intentionally more diverse than in earlier GLP-1 receptor agonist studies. The researchers hypothesized that patients at increased risk of MACE would experience a comparatively greater relative treatment benefit with exenatide than those at lower risk. That did not prove to be the case.

EXSCEL did confirm noninferiority compared with placebo (P < .001), but once-weekly exenatide resulted in a nonsignificant reduction in major adverse CV events, and a trend for RRR in all-cause mortality (RRR = 14%; ARR = 1% [P = .06]).

HARMONY OUTCOMES. The Albiglutide and Cardiovascular Outcomes in Patients With Type 2 Diabetes and Cardiovascular Disease study (HARMONY OUTCOMES)19 was a double-blind, randomized, placebocontrolled trial conducted at 610 sites across 28 countries. The study investigated albiglutide, 30 to 50 mg once weekly, compared with placebo. It included 9463 patients ages ≥ 40 years with T2D who had an HbA1c > 7% (median value, 8.7%) and established CV disease. Patients were evaluated for a median 1.6 years.

Albiglutide reduced the risk of CV causes of death, nonfatal MI, and nonfatal stroke by an RRR of 22%, (ARR, 2%) (noninferiority, P < .0001; superiority, P < .0006).

Continue to: REWIND

Pages

Recommended Reading

Eating disorders may add to poor type 2 control, but BMI confounds the issue
MDedge Family Medicine
Certain diabetes drugs may thwart dementia
MDedge Family Medicine
Dapagliflozin approved for reducing HF hospitalization in diabetes
MDedge Family Medicine
Severe hypoglycemia, poor glycemic control fuels fracture risk in older diabetic patients
MDedge Family Medicine
SUSTAIN 10: Weight loss, glycemic control better with semaglutide than liraglutide
MDedge Family Medicine
GABA falls short for type 1 diabetes prevention in children
MDedge Family Medicine
Synchronizing refills saves money, improves outcomes
MDedge Family Medicine
Body weight influences SGLT2-inhibitor effects in type 1 diabetes
MDedge Family Medicine
Signs of adult diabetes apparent in very young children
MDedge Family Medicine
Ketoacidosis is on the rise in children with type 1 diabetes
MDedge Family Medicine