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Diabetes medications and cardiovascular outcome trials: Lessons learned

Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine. 2017 October;84(10):759-767 | 10.3949/ccjm.84gr.17006
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ABSTRACT

The US Food and Drug Administration’s current standards require that new diabetes medications demonstrate cardiovascular safety in large, long-term trials. New drugs that have been assessed in such trials are changing the management of type 2 diabetes.

KEY POINTS

  • Saxagliptin, alogliptin, and sitagliptin confer neither benefit nor harm for the composite outcome of cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, or stroke. Saxagliptin and alogliptin carry warnings of increased risk of heart failure; sitagliptin was shown to not affect heart failure risk. 
  • Liraglutide and semaglutide showed evidence of cardiovascular benefit; lixisenatide was noninferior to placebo.
  • Empagliflozin is now approved to reduce risk of cardiovascular death in patients with type 2 diabetes and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease.
  • Canagliflozin decreased the composite outcome of cardiovascular death, nonfatal myocardial infarction, or nonfatal stroke in patients with type 2 diabetes with or at risk of cardiovascular disease, but also increased the risk of amputation and did not significantly reduce the individual outcome of cardiovascular death.

SGLT-2 INHIBITORS

The renal glomeruli filter about 180 g of glucose every day in normal adults; nearly all of it is reabsorbed by SGLT-2 in the proximal tubules, so that very little glucose is excreted in the urine.24–26 The benign condition hereditary glucosuria occurs due to loss-of-function mutations in the gene for SGLT-2. Individuals with this condition rarely if ever develop type 2 diabetes or obesity, and this observation led pharmaceutical researchers to probe SGLT-2 as a therapeutic target.

Inhibitors of SGLT-2 block glucose reabsorption in the renal proximal tubules and lead to glucosuria. Patients treated with an SGLT-2 inhibitor have lower serum glucose levels and lose weight. Inhibitors also reduce sodium reabsorption via SGLT-2 and lead to increased sodium excretion and decreased blood pressure.27

Three SGLT-2 antagonists are available in the United States: canagliflozin, dapagliflozin, and empagliflozin (Table 1). Ertugliflozin is currently in a phase 3B trial, and cardiovascular outcomes trials are in the planning phase for sotagliflozin, a dual SGLT-1/SGLT-2 inhibitor with SGLT-1 localized to the gastrointestinal tract.28

Empaglifozin: Evidence of benefit

The EMPA-REG OUTCOME trial29 randomized more than 7,200 patients with type 2 diabetes and atherosclerotic vascular disease to receive the SGLT-2 inhibitor empagliflozin or placebo as once-daily tablets, with both groups receiving off-study treatment for glycemic control at the discretion of their own care providers. Two doses of empagliflozin were evaluated in the trial (10 and 25 mg per day), with the 2 dosing groups pooled for all analyses as prospectively planned.

Patients taking empagliflozin had a 14% relative risk reduction of the composite outcome (cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, and stroke) vs placebo, with no difference in effect between the 2 randomized doses. The improvement in the composite outcome was seen early in the empagliflozin group and persisted for the 4 years of the study.

This was the first trial of newly developed diabetes drugs that showed a statistically significant reduction in cardiovascular risk. The study revealed a 38% relative risk reduction in cardiovascular death in the treatment group. The risk reduction occurred early in the trial and improved throughout the duration of the study. This is a dramatic finding, unequaled even in trials of drugs that specifically target cardiovascular disease. Both doses of empagliflozin studied provided similar benefit over placebo, reinforcing the validity of the findings. Interestingly, in the empagliflozin group, there was a 35% relative risk reduction in heart failure hospitalizations.

Canaglifozin: Evidence of benefit

The CANVAS Program consisted of two sister trials, CANVAS and CANVAS-R, and examined the safety and efficacy of canagliflozin.30 More than 10,000 participants with type 2 diabetes and atherosclerotic disease or at increased risk of cardiovascular disease were randomized to receive canagliflozin or placebo. Canagliflozin led to a 14% relative risk reduction in the composite outcome of cardiovascular death, nonfatal myocardial infarction, or nonfatal stroke, but there was a statistically significant doubling in the incidence of amputations. Unlike empagliflozin, canagliflozin did not demonstrate a significant reduction in death from cardiovascular causes, suggesting that this may not be a class effect of SGLT-2 inhibitors. As with empagliflozin, canagliflozin led to a 33% relative risk reduction in heart failure hospitalizations.

Cardiovascular benefits independent of glucose-lowering

The cardiovascular benefits of empagliflozin in EMPA-REG OUTCOME and canagliflozin in CANVAS were observed early, suggesting that the mechanism may be due to the direct effects on the cardiovascular system rather than glycemic modification.

Improved glycemic control with the SGLT-2 inhibitor was seen early in both studies, but with the trials designed for glycemic equipoise encouraging open-label therapy targeting hemoglobin A1c to standard-of-care targets in both groups, the contrast in hemoglobin A1c between groups diminished throughout the trial after its first assessment. Although hemoglobin A1c levels in the SGLT-2 inhibitor groups decreased in the first 12 weeks, they increased over time nearly to the level seen in the placebo group. The adjusted mean hemoglobin A1c level in the placebo groups remained near 8.0% throughout the studies, a target consistent with guidelines from the American Diabetes Association and the European Association for the Study of Diabetes31 for the high-risk populations recruited and enrolled.

Blood pressure reduction and weight loss do not explain cardiovascular benefits

SGLT-2 inhibitors lower blood pressure independent of their diuretic effects. In the EMPA-REG OUTCOME trial, the adjusted mean systolic blood pressure was 3 to 4 mm Hg lower in the treatment groups than in the placebo group throughout the trial.29 This level of blood pressure lowering translates to an estimated 10% to 12% relative risk reduction for major adverse cardiovascular events, including heart failure. Although the risk reduction from blood pressure lowering is not insignificant, it does not explain the 38% reduction in cardiovascular deaths seen in the trial. Canagliflozin led to a similar 4-mm Hg reduction in systolic pressure compared with the placebo group.30

Weight loss was seen with both empagliflozin and canagliflozin but was not dramatic and is unlikely to account for the described cardiovascular benefits.

Theories of cardiovascular benefit

Several mechanisms have been proposed to help explain the observed cardiovascular benefits of SGLT-2 inhibitors.32

Ketone-body elevation. Ferrannini et al33 found that the blood concentration of the ketone-body beta-hydroxybutyrate is about twice as high in patients with type 2 diabetes in the fasting state who are chronically taking empagliflozin as in  patients not receiving the drug. Beta-hydroxybutyrate levels peak after a meal and then return to baseline over several hours before rising again during the fasting period. Although the ketone elevation is not nearly as extreme as in diabetic ketoacidosis (about a 1,000-fold increase), the observed increase may reduce myocardial oxygen demand, as beta-hydroxybutyrate is among the most efficient metabolic substrates for the myocardium.       

Red blood cell expansion. Perhaps a more likely explanation of the cardiovascular benefit seen with SGLT-2 inhibitor therapy is the increase in hemoglobin and hematocrit levels. At first attributed to hemoconcentration secondary to diuresis, this has been disproven by a number of studies. The EMPA-REG OUTCOME trial29 found that within 12 weeks of exposure to empagliflozin, hematocrit levels rose nearly 4% absolutely compared with the levels in the placebo group. This increase is equivalent to transfusing a unit of red blood cells, favorably affecting myocardial oxygen supply.

Reduction in glomerular hypertension. The kidneys regulate glomerular filtration in a process involving the macula densa, an area of specialized cells in the juxtaglomerular apparatus in the loop of Henle that responds to sodium concentration in the urine. Normally, SGLT-2 receptors upstream from the loop of Henle reabsorb sodium and glucose into the bloodstream, reducing sodium delivery to the macula densa, which senses this as a low-volume state. The macula densa cells respond by releasing factors that dilate afferent arterioles and increase glomerular filtration. People with diabetes have more glucose to reabsorb and therefore also reabsorb more sodium, leading to glomerular hypertension.

SGLT-2 inhibitors block both glucose and sodium reuptake at SGLT-2 receptors, normalizing the response at the macula densa, restoring a normal glomerular filtration rate, and alleviating glomerular hypertension. As the kidney perceives a more normal volume status, renin-angiotensin-aldosterone stimulation is attenuated and sympathetic nervous system activity improves.27,34 If this model of SGLT-2 inhibitor effects on the kidney is correct, these drugs have similar effects as angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARBs), mineralocorticoid antagonists, and beta-blockers combined.