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November 05, 2022
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Empagliflozin lowers kidney disease progression, cardiovascular death in patients with CKD

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ORLANDO —Empagliflozin reduced kidney disease progression and cardiovascular death in patients with chronic kidney disease, according to data presented at ASN Kidney Week.

William G. Herrington

“Empagliflozin safely reduced the composite primary outcome of chronic kidney disease progression or cardiovascular death by the highly statistically significant 28%. Relative benefits we observed were consistent across the whole subgroups by diabetes and across the range of eGFR we studied to at least 20 mL/min/1.73 m2,” William G. Herrington, MA, MBBS, MD, of the University of Oxford and co-principal investigator who presented on behalf of the EMPA-KIDNEY Collaborative Group, said, here.

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Data were derived from Herrington WG, et al. FR-OR68. Presented at: ASN Kidney Week; Nov. 3-6, 2022; Orlando (hybrid meeting).

Herrington presented results of the phase 3 EMPA-KIDNEY study, a randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled clinical trial to evaluate the effect of empagliflozin (Jardiance, Boehringer Ingelheim and Eli Lilly and Company) on kidney disease progression and cardiovascular mortality risk in patients with CKD. Empagliflozin is an oral, once-daily, highly selective SGLT2 inhibitor.

EMPA-KIDNEY randomized 6,609 patients across eight countries and included a broad range of underlying causes, many with comorbidities across the spectrum of cardiovascular, kidney or metabolic conditions. Patients’ mean age was 64 years. The trial assessed both kidney and cardiovascular outcomes in patients across the spectrum of CKD severity.

Researchers defined the primary outcome as time to a first event of either cardiovascular death or kidney disease progression, defined as end-stage kidney disease, a sustained decline in eGFR to less than 10 mL/min/1.73 m2, kidney death, or a sustained decline of at least 40% in eGFR from randomization. Key secondary outcomes were cardiovascular death or hospitalization for heart failure, all-cause hospitalization, and all-cause mortality.

Researchers found the risk of kidney disease progression or cardiovascular death was reduced by 28% compared with placebo (HR = 0.72; 95% CI, 0.64-0.82) when treated with 10-mg empagliflozin once daily. Researchers also found a 14% reduction in all-cause hospitalization (HR = 0.86; 95% CI, 0.78-0.95).

The overall safety data were generally consistent with previous findings, confirming the well-established safety profile of empagliflozin, researchers said.

“The design of the EMPA-KIDNEY trial included a wider range of patients than ever before,” Richard Haynes, co-principal investigator, said in a company press release. “Previous SGLT2 inhibitor trials focused on certain groups of people living with CKD, such as those with diabetes or high levels of protein in their urine. Today's positive trial results across a broad CKD population reflect an opportunity to improve the treatment of this disease and prevent people from needing dialysis.”

References:

Herrington WG, et al. FR-OR68. Presented at: ASN Kidney Week; Nov. 3-6, 2022; Orlando (hybrid meeting).

Herrington WG, et al. N Engl J Med. 2022;doi:10.1056/NEJMoa2204233.