Chung Sungjin, Kim Gheun-Ho
Department of Internal Medicine, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, Seoul 06591, Korea.
Department of Internal Medicine, Hanyang University College of Medicine, Seoul 04763, Korea.
Life (Basel). 2021 Apr 25;11(5):389. doi: 10.3390/life11050389.
New drugs were recently developed to treat hyperglycemia in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2D). However, metformin remains the first-line anti-diabetic agent because of its cost-effectiveness. It has pleiotropic action that produces cardiovascular benefits, and it can be useful in diabetic nephropathy, although metformin-associated lactic acidosis is a hindrance to its use in patients with kidney failure. New anti-diabetic agents, including glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor (GLP-1R) agonists, dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4) inhibitors, and sodium-glucose transporter-2 (SGLT-2) inhibitors, also produce cardiovascular or renal benefits in T2D patients. Their glucose-independent beneficial actions can lead to cardiorenal protection via hemodynamic stabilization and inflammatory modulation. Systemic hypertension is relieved by natriuresis and improved vascular dysfunction. Enhanced tubuloglomerular feedback can be restored by SGLT-2 inhibition, reducing glomerular hypertension. Patients with non-diabetic kidney disease might also benefit from those drugs because hypertension, proteinuria, oxidative stress, and inflammation are common factors in the progression of kidney disease, irrespective of the presence of diabetes. In various animal models of non-diabetic kidney disease, metformin, GLP-1R agonists, DPP-4 inhibitors, and SGLT-2 inhibitors were favorable to kidney morphology and function. They strikingly attenuated biomarkers of oxidative stress and inflammatory responses in diseased kidneys. However, whether those animal results translate to patients with non-diabetic kidney disease has yet to be evaluated. Considering the paucity of new agents to treat kidney disease and the minimal adverse effects of metformin, GLP-1R agonists, DPP-4 inhibitors, and SGLT-2 inhibitors, these anti-diabetic agents could be used in patients with non-diabetic kidney disease. This paper provides a rationale for clinical trials that apply metformin, GLP-1R agonists, DPP-4 inhibitors, and SGLT-2 inhibitors to non-diabetic kidney disease.
最近研发出了用于治疗2型糖尿病(T2D)患者高血糖的新药。然而,由于二甲双胍具有成本效益,它仍然是一线抗糖尿病药物。它具有多效性作用,能带来心血管益处,并且对糖尿病肾病可能有用,尽管二甲双胍相关的乳酸性酸中毒是其在肾衰竭患者中使用的一个障碍。新型抗糖尿病药物,包括胰高血糖素样肽-1受体(GLP-1R)激动剂、二肽基肽酶-4(DPP-4)抑制剂和钠-葡萄糖协同转运蛋白-2(SGLT-2)抑制剂,在T2D患者中也能产生心血管或肾脏益处。它们不依赖于血糖的有益作用可通过血流动力学稳定和炎症调节实现心脏和肾脏保护。利尿可缓解系统性高血压并改善血管功能障碍。抑制SGLT-2可恢复增强的肾小管-肾小球反馈,降低肾小球高血压。非糖尿病肾病患者也可能从这些药物中获益,因为高血压、蛋白尿、氧化应激和炎症是肾病进展的常见因素,无论是否存在糖尿病。在各种非糖尿病肾病动物模型中,二甲双胍、GLP-1R激动剂、DPP-4抑制剂和SGLT-2抑制剂对肾脏形态和功能有益。它们显著减轻了患病肾脏中氧化应激和炎症反应的生物标志物。然而,这些动物实验结果是否适用于非糖尿病肾病患者还有待评估。考虑到治疗肾病的新药匮乏,以及二甲双胍、GLP-1R激动剂、DPP-4抑制剂和SGLT-2抑制剂的不良反应极小,这些抗糖尿病药物可用于非糖尿病肾病患者。本文为将二甲双胍、GLP-1R激动剂、DPP-4抑制剂和SGLT-2抑制剂应用于非糖尿病肾病的临床试验提供了理论依据。