Santamarina Marile, Carlson Curt J
Gregory School of Pharmacy, Palm Beach Atlantic University, 901 South Flagler Drive, West Palm Beach, FL, 33416, USA.
BMC Cardiovasc Disord. 2019 Mar 15;19(1):60. doi: 10.1186/s12872-019-1036-0.
Cardiovascular (CV) disease (CVD) is a well-recognized complication of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and there is a clinical need for glucose-lowering therapies that do not further increase CV risk in this population. Although sulfonylureas (SUs) may be used as second-line therapy for patients requiring additional therapy after first-line metformin to improve glycemic control, their long-term effects on CV outcomes remain uncertain, and a wide range of alternative agents exist including dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4) inhibitors.
Literature searches in PubMed (2013-2018) were conducted with terms for DPP-4 inhibitors combined with CV terms, with preference given to cardiovascular outcomes trials (CVOTs). Reference lists from retrieved articles and diabetes guidelines were also considered.
This narrative review discusses current evidence for the CV safety of these agents, describes the long-term CV effects of DPP-4 inhibitors, including effects on CV events, mortality, the risk for heart failure hospitalization, and highlights the need for further research into the CV effects of SU therapy. Although SUs remain a treatment option for T2DM, the long-term effects of these agents on CV outcomes are unclear, and further long-term studies are required. For DPP-4 inhibitors, uncertainties have been raised about their long-term effect on hospitalization for heart failure in light of the results of SAVOR-TIMI 53, although the findings of other DPP-4 inhibitor CVOTs in T2DM and data analyses have suggested these agents do not increase the occurrence of adverse CV outcomes.
Based on recent CVOTs and guideline updates, the choice of add-on to metformin therapy for patients with T2DM and established CV disease should be a sodium-glucose co-transporter-2 inhibitor or a glucagon-like peptide-1 agonist with proven CV benefit. Additional treatment options for those individuals who require therapy intensification, as well as in patients with T2DM and without established CVD include DPP-4 inhibitors and SUs. Since few head-to-head trials have compared the effects of different oral glucose-lowering agents on CV outcomes in T2DM, with most CVOTs using placebo as a comparator, the CAROLINA trial will provide important information on the comparative CV safety of a commonly prescribed SU and a DPP-4 inhibitor.
心血管(CV)疾病(CVD)是2型糖尿病(T2DM)公认的并发症,临床上需要有不进一步增加该人群CV风险的降糖疗法。尽管磺脲类药物(SUs)可作为一线二甲双胍治疗后需要额外治疗以改善血糖控制的患者的二线治疗药物,但其对CV结局的长期影响仍不确定,并且存在多种替代药物,包括二肽基肽酶-4(DPP-4)抑制剂。
在PubMed(2013 - 2018年)中进行文献检索,检索词为DPP-4抑制剂并结合CV相关术语,优先选择心血管结局试验(CVOTs)。还考虑了检索到的文章的参考文献列表和糖尿病指南。
本叙述性综述讨论了这些药物CV安全性的当前证据,描述了DPP-4抑制剂的长期CV影响,包括对CV事件、死亡率、心力衰竭住院风险的影响,并强调了对SU治疗的CV影响进行进一步研究的必要性。尽管SUs仍然是T2DM的一种治疗选择,但其对CV结局的长期影响尚不清楚,需要进一步的长期研究。对于DPP-4抑制剂,鉴于SAVOR-TIMI 53的结果,人们对其对心力衰竭住院的长期影响提出了疑问,尽管其他T2DM中DPP-4抑制剂CVOTs的结果和数据分析表明这些药物不会增加不良CV结局的发生。
基于最近的CVOTs和指南更新,对于患有T2DM和已确诊CV疾病的患者,二甲双胍治疗的附加药物选择应为钠-葡萄糖协同转运蛋白-2抑制剂或已证实具有CV益处的胰高血糖素样肽-1激动剂。对于那些需要强化治疗的个体以及没有已确诊CVD的T2DM患者,其他治疗选择包括DPP-4抑制剂和SUs。由于很少有头对头试验比较不同口服降糖药物对T2DM患者CV结局的影响,且大多数CVOTs使用安慰剂作为对照,因此CAROLINA试验将提供关于一种常用SU和一种DPP-4抑制剂比较CV安全性的重要信息。