Conference Coverage

Hematocrit improvement with SGLT2 inhibitor: Not just a diuretic effect?


 

REPORTING FROM AACE 2018

No such significant changes in those measures were seen in the placebo group, Dr. Ghanim said.

There was a modest but nonsignificant increase in erythropoietin concentrations in the dapagliflozin-treated group, according to the researcher.

Circulating ferritin also fell by about 40% over the course of the study. “Circulating ferritin doesn’t have a clear indication or implication on iron transport,” Dr. Ghanim said. “However, it gets secreted from macrophages and from the liver, and it gets used as a marker for inflammation, and it’s also used as a marker of liver function. So a reduction in ferritin levels may have some clinical implication to what’s going on in the liver.”

On the basis of these findings, it appears that SGLT2 inhibition might increase hematocrit via anti-inflammatory effects and increased erythropoiesis, Dr. Ghanim said.

Recommended Reading

MDedge Daily News: Diabetes patients ignore a deadly risk
MDedge Cardiology
VIDEO: Meta-analysis: Mortality, safety data may favor SGLT2 inhibitors in T2DM
MDedge Cardiology
‘Fast food swamps’ linked to type 1 diabetes
MDedge Cardiology
MDedge Daily News: Which diabetes drug boosts survival best?
MDedge Cardiology
Targeting obesity could slow brain aging in psychosis
MDedge Cardiology
MDedge Daily News: Physician burnout needs more than yoga
MDedge Cardiology
Metabolic syndrome scoring system predicts CVD in type 2 diabetes
MDedge Cardiology
Lower glucose target linked to improved mortality in critically ill
MDedge Cardiology
Diabetes spending topped $101 billion in 2013
MDedge Cardiology
VIDEO: First year after bariatric surgery critical for HbA1c improvement
MDedge Cardiology