TOPLINE:
In patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) and type 2 diabetes, baseline insulin resistance was associated with increased cardiovascular (CV) but not kidney risk and did not affect the efficacy of finerenone.
METHODOLOGY:
- Insulin resistance is implicated in CV disease in patients with CKD, but its role in CKD progression is less clear.
- This post hoc analysis of FIDELITY, a pooled analysis of the and trials, randomly assigned patients with type 2 diabetes and CKD (who received optimized renin-angiotensin system blockade) to receive finerenone (10 mg or 20 mg) once daily or placebo and followed them for a median of 3 years.
- An estimated glucose disposal rate (eGDR), a measure of insulin resistance, was calculated for 12,964 patients (median age, 65 years), using waist circumference, hypertension status, and glycated hemoglobin.
- Outcomes included a CV composite (time to CV death, nonfatal myocardial infarction, nonfatal stroke, or hospitalization for heart failure) and a kidney composite (time to renal failure, a sustained decrease ≥ 57% in the initial estimated glomerular filtration rate, or renal death).
TAKEAWAY:
- The median eGDR was 4.1 mg/kg/min. The 50% of patients with a lower eGDR were considered insulin resistant, whereas the remaining half with a higher eGDR were considered insulin sensitive.
- The incidence rate of CV outcomes was higher among patients with insulin resistance in both the finerenone group (incidence rate per 100 patient-years, 5.18 vs 3.47 among insulin-sensitive patients) and the placebo group (6.34 vs 3.76), but eGDR showed no association with kidney outcomes.
- The efficacy of finerenone vs placebo on CV (Wald test P = .063) and kidney outcomes (Wald test P = .51) did not change significantly across the range of baseline eGDR values.
- The incidences of treatment-emergent adverse events and severe adverse events with finerenone were similar between the insulin-resistant and insulin-sensitive subgroups.
IN PRACTICE:
“The efficacy and safety of finerenone were not modified by baseline insulin resistance. A higher risk of CV — but not kidney outcomes was observed in patients with CKD and T2D with greater insulin resistance,” the authors wrote.
SOURCE:
This study was led by Thomas Ebert of the Medical Department III — Endocrinology, Nephrology, Rheumatology, University of Leipzig Medical Center, Leipzig, Germany, and published online in Diabetes Care.
LIMITATIONS:
This study was not adequately powered to evaluate the statistical significance of the association of eGDR with CV and kidney outcomes and was hypothesis-generating. Further studies are needed to examine whether the effects of insulin resistance differ between individuals with diabetes vs those with advanced CKD with or without diabetes.
DISCLOSURES:
The FIDELIO-DKD and FIGARO-DKD trials were conducted and sponsored by Bayer AG. Three authors declared being full-time employees of Bayer. Several authors declared receiving personal fees, consulting fees, grants, or research support from; holding patents with; or having ownership interests in various pharmaceutical companies, including Bayer.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.