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Semaglutide Kidney Benefits Extend to Those Without Diabetes


 

FROM ERA 2024

STOCKHOLM — Improvements in kidney function outcomes observed with glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists in patients with type 2 diabetes extend to patients who are overweight or obese but don›t yet have type 2 diabetes, new research shows.

“These data are important because they are the first data to suggest a kidney benefit of semaglutide in this patient population in the absence of diabetes,” lead author Helen M. Colhoun, MD, of the Institute of Genetics and Cancer, University of Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom, told this news organization.

“This is a population at high risk of chronic kidney disease with an increased need for kidney protection,” she said.

The late-breaking study was presented this week at the 61st European Renal Association (ERA) Congress 2024 and simultaneously published in Nature Medicine.

SELECT Trial Patients Without Diabetes

The findings are from a secondary analysis of the randomized SELECT (Semaglutide Effects on Heart Disease and Stroke in Patients With Overweight or Obesity) trial, which evaluated cardiovascular outcomes of semaglutide treatment among 17,604 adults with preexisting cardiovascular disease who were overweight or obese — but did not have diabetes.

For its primary endpoint, the trial showed semaglutide was associated with a 20% reduction in major adverse cardiovascular events compared with placebo.

With obesity also associated with a significantly increased risk of chronic kidney disease — and the headline-making FLOW trial, also presented at the congress, showing key benefits of semaglutide in improving kidney function in people with CKD and type 2 diabetes the secondary analysis of SELECT was conducted to investigate whether those kidney benefits extended to people without type 2 diabetes.

Patients were randomized 1:1 to once-weekly subcutaneous semaglutide at a dose of 2.4 mg or placebo. Baseline patient characteristics were well-balanced, including kidney function and albuminuria status.

The primary endpoint for the analysis was a nephropathy composite of time from randomization to the first occurrence of death from kidney causes; initiation of chronic kidney replacement therapy; onset of persistent estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) < 15 mL/min/1.73 m2; persistent ≥ 50% reduction in eGFR compared with baseline; or onset of persistent macroalbuminuria.

With a median follow-up of 182 weeks, the results showed that the semaglutide group was significantly less likely to develop the primary composite endpoint compared with the placebo group (1.8% vs 2.2%; hazard ratio [HR], 0.78; P = .02).

A significantly reduced decline in eGFR in the semaglutide group was observed at a prespecified 104-week time point, with a treatment effect of 0.75 mL/min/1.73 m2 (P < .001), and the effect was more pronounced among participants with baseline eGFR < 60 mL/min/1.73 m2 (P < .001).

Furthermore, those in the semaglutide group had a significantly lower proportionate increase in urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio (UACR) compared with placebo (–10.7%; P < .001) at the prespecified 104 weeks, with a net treatment benefit of –27.2% and –31.4% among those with randomization to UACR 30 to < 300 mg/g and 2300 mg/g, respectively.

Improvements varied according to baseline UACR status and were more pronounced among those with macroalbuminuria, at –8.1% for those with normoalbuminuria (n = 14,848), –27% for microalbuminuria (n = 1968), and –31% for macroalbuminuria (n = 325).

There were no reports of acute kidney injury associated with semaglutide, regardless of baseline eGFR.

“We were hopeful that there would be similar benefits as those observed in the diabetes studies, but there are differences in kidney disease among those with and without type 2 diabetes, so we weren’t sure,” Dr. Colhoun told this news organization.

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