Renal Outcomes in the EXenatide Study of Cardiovascular Event Lowering (EXSCEL)
BETHEL, MA; MENTZ, RJ; MERRILL, P; BUSE, JB; CHAN, JC; GOODMAN, SG; IQBAL, N; JAKUBONIENE, N; KATONA, BG; LOKHNYGINA, Y; LOPES, RD; OHMAN, PK ...
Published in: Diabetes
Background: EXSCEL was a multinational, randomized, blinded, placebo-controlled, pragmatic CV outcome trial of once-weekly exenatide on the background of usual care. We report exenatide’s impact on estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), new macroalbuminuria and 2 renal composites from a prespecified analysis plan.Methods: Opportunistic local laboratory data were collected. Overall least squares mean difference (LSMD) eGFR (95% confidence interval [95% CI]) was calculated for 13844 patients with baseline and ≥1 follow-up value. Effect on new macroalbuminuria was estimated with a Cox regression model. Effects on renal composites were estimated with interval censored time to event models, with and without covariate adjustment (demographics and disease characteristics).Results: Intention-to-treat analyses showed no significant difference in eGFR levels with exenatide (LSMD +0.21 [-0.27, 0.70] mL/min.1.73m2, p=0.39). New macroalbuminuria occurred in 2.2% and 2.5% of the exenatide and placebo groups (p=0.19). There was a 15% lower renal composite 2 adjusted risk with exenatide (p=0.027) (Table).Conclusions: A composite of 40% eGFR decline, renal replacement, renal death or new macroalbuminuria was significantly reduced in an adjusted analysis by the addition of exenatide in a broad range of people with type 2 diabetes. Other renal outcomes were numerically but not statistically improved with exenatide.
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