958-P: Once-Weekly Exenatide Effects on EGFR Slope and UACR as a Function of Baseline UACR: An EXSCEL Trial Post Hoc Analysis
CLEGG, LE; DER AART, AV; PENLAND, RC; BOULTON, DW; SJÖSTRÖM, CD; MENTZ, RJ; HOLMAN, RR; HEERSPINK, HL
Published in: Diabetes
GLP-1 RA effects on major kidney outcome in unselected T2D patients at high cardiovascular (CV) risk are modest or neutral. However, GLP-1 RA may provide renal benefit in those at high risk of worsening kidney disease. We examined once-weekly exenatide (EQW) effects on eGFR slope and UACR change, as a function of baseline UACR, in a subset of EXSCEL participants. Of 14752 EXSCEL participants, eGFR slope was assessed in those with baseline UACR and ≥1 post-baseline eGFR (n=3503 [23.7%]) via mixed model repeated measures (MMRM) analysis (median follow-up 3.3 years). UACR percent change from baseline to first post-baseline measurement (median time 8.9 months) was assessed in those with baseline and ≥1 follow-up UACR (n=2828 [19.2%]) via ANCOVA of log-transformed UACR, with baseline UACR as a covariate. Participants with baseline UACR measurements were generally similar to the overall EXSCEL population, and balanced across treatment arms. EQW improved eGFR slope in those with baseline UACR>100mg/g and UACR>200mg/g, but not at lower UACR thresholds. No difference in EQW effect on eGFR was observed as a function of baseline eGFR, CV disease history, RAAS inhibitor use, or SBP. UACR improvement was similar across UACR categories. This EXSCEL post-hoc analysis suggests that EQW reduces UACR, with improvement in eGFR slope specifically in participants with elevated baseline UACR.