KDIGO Controversies Conference on Management of Patients with Diabetes and Chronic Kidney Disease

Similar documents
KDIGO Controversies Conference on Management of Patients with Diabetes and Chronic Kidney Disease

KDIGO Controversies Conference on Challenges in the Conduct of Clinical Trials in Nephrology

KDIGO Controversies Conference on Blood Pressure in CKD

Renal Protection Staying on Target

Management of Hypertension in Diabetic Nephropathy: How Low Should We Go?

Analysis of Factors Causing Hyperkalemia

University of Groningen. Evaluation of renal end points in nephrology trials Weldegiorgis, Misghina Tekeste

(renoprotective (end-stage renal disease, ESRD) therapies) (JAMA)

Diabetic Kidney Disease Tripti Singh MD Department of Nephrology University of Wisconsin

HEART FAILURE AND DIABETES MELLITUS: DANGEROUS LIASONS MICHEL KOMAJDA, MD

Diabetic Kidney Disease Tripti Singh MD Department of Nephrology University of Wisconsin

Diabetes is the most common cause of end-stage renal

CASE A2 Managing Between-meal Hypoglycemia

Comparison between the efficacy of double blockade and single blockade of RAAS in diabetic kidney disease

Disclosures of Interest. Publications Diabetologia Key points to emphasize

University of Groningen. Evaluation of renal end points in nephrology trials Weldegiorgis, Misghina Tekeste

Diabetic Kidney Disease in the Primary Care Clinic

Objectives. Kidney Complications With Diabetes. Case 10/21/2015

6/10/2014. Chronic Kidney Disease - General management and standard of care. Management of CKD according to stage (KDOQI 2002)

2 Furthermore, quantitative coronary angiography

SLOWING PROGRESSION OF KIDNEY DISEASE. Mark Rosenberg MD University of Minnesota

Diabetic Nephropathy 2009

Chronic kidney disease-what can you do and when to refer?

Hot Topics in Diabetic Kidney Disease a primary care perspective

Kidney Disease. Chronic kidney disease (CKD) requiring dialysis. The F.P. s Role in the Management of Chronic. Stages

Diabetic Nephropathy

Tread Carefully Because you Tread on my Nephrons. Prescribing Hints in Renal Disease

Chronic Kidney Disease

Pharmacy Medical Policy Angiotensin II Receptor Antagonists

RENAAL, IRMA-2 and IDNT. Three featured trials linking a disease spectrum IDNT RENAAL. Death IRMA 2

Joslin Diabetes Center Joslin Diabetes Forum 2013: The Impact of Comorbidities on Glucose Control Scenario 2: Reduced Renal Function

Supplementary Appendix

Combined Angiotensin Inhibition for the Treatment of Diabetic Nephropathy

NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR HEALTH AND CARE EXCELLENCE. Single Technology Appraisal. Canagliflozin in combination therapy for treating type 2 diabetes

ROLE OF ANGIOTENSIN CONVERTING ENZYME INHIBITORS AND ANGIOTENSIN RECEPTOR BLOCKERS IN TYPE I DIABETIC NEPHROPATHY DR.NASIM MUSA

Fan Shunan 1, Yuan Jiqing 2 and Dong Xue 3. Introduction. Original Article

Published trials point to a detrimental relationship

Increased Risk of Renal Deterioration Associated with Low e-gfr in Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Only in Albuminuric Subjects


Interventions to reduce progression of CKD what is the evidence? John Feehally

KDIGO Controversies Conference on Dialysis Initiation, Modality Choice and Prescription. January 25 28, 2018 Madrid, Spain

ACP Brief Fall 2006 prioritization. Angiotensin II Receptor Blockers (ARBs) for Proteinuria, Hypertension (HTN) and Congestive Heart Failure (CHF)

THE PROGNOSIS OF PATIENTS WITH CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE AND DIABETES MELLITUS

Diabetes Guidelines in View of Recent Clinical Trials Are They Still Applicable?

Chronic Kidney Disease Management for Primary Care Physicians. Dr. Allen Liu Consultant Nephrologist KTPH 21 November 2015

The CARI Guidelines Caring for Australasians with Renal Impairment. ACE Inhibitor and Angiotensin II Antagonist Combination Treatment GUIDELINES

23-Jun-15. Albuminuria Renal and Cardiovascular Consequences A history of progress since ,490,000. Kidney Center, UMC Groningen

The CARI Guidelines Caring for Australasians with Renal Impairment. Protein Restriction to prevent the progression of diabetic nephropathy GUIDELINES

Hypertension Management in Diabetic Kidney Disease

Figure 1 LVH: Allowed Cost by Claim Volume (Data generated from a Populytics analysis).

ACE Inhibitors and Protection Against Kidney Disease Progression in Patients With Type 2 Diabetes: What s the Evidence?

Diabetes has become the most common

Clinical Policy: ACEI and ARB Duplicate Therapy Reference Number: CP.PMN.61 Effective Date: Last Review Date: 05.18

Does renin angiotensin system blockade deserve preferred status over other anti-hypertensive medications for the treatment of people with diabetes?

Preventing the cardiovascular complications of hypertension

Diabetic Kidney Disease: Update. GKA Master Class. Istanbul 2011

DIA LEAGUE DIA LEAGUE. 06 th November, Chandigarh, India

CKDinform: A PCP s Guide to CKD Detection and Delaying Progression

Study population The study population comprised patients with nephropathy from Type II diabetes.

ACEIs / ARBs NDHP dihydropyridine ( DHP ) ACEIs ARBs ACEIs ARBs NDHP. ( GFR ) 60 ml/min/1.73m ( chronic kidney disease, CKD )

Jennifer Loh, MD, FACE Chief of Endocrinology KP Hawaii AAMD of Medical Education, KP Hawaii

Concept and General Objectives of the Conference: Prognosis Matters. Andrew S. Levey, MD Tufts Medical Center Boston, MA

Higher levels of Urinary Albumin Excretion within the Normal Range Predict Faster Decline in Glomerular Filtration Rate in Diabetic Patients

Bardoxolone Methyl in Type 2 Diabetes and Stage 4 Chronic Kidney Disease

National Institute for Health and Care Excellence. Single Technology Appraisal (STA) Empagliflozin combination therapy for treating type 2 diabetes

A Guidance Statement from the American College of Physicians

Remission and Regression of Diabetic Nephropathy

ERBP Guideline on management of diabetics with advanced CKD

Diabetic Nephropathy Larry Lehrner, Ph.D.,M.D.

NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR HEALTH AND CLINICAL EXCELLENCE SCOPE

Anastasia Chrysostomou, Eugenia Pedagogos, Lachlan MacGregor, and Gavin J. Becker

Diabetes has become the most common

Integrating biomarkers to predict renal and cardiovascular drug efficacy Schievink, Bauke

KDIGO Controversies Conference on Autosomal Dominant Polycystic Kidney Disease (ADPKD)

PRE-DIALYSIS CARE IN CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE PATIENTS DR O. A ADEJUMO MBBS, FWACP, FMCP

OLD AND NEW DRUGS FOR CONTROLING DIABETES THERAPEUTIC CLASSES AND MECHANISM OF ACTION

DIA LEAGUE DIA LEAGUE. 26 th November, Bhubaneshwar, India

SGLT2 Inhibitors

DIABETES DEBATE - IS NEW BETTER?

Case Study in Chronic Renal Failure

2782 Diabetes Care Volume 37, October 2014

Drugs to Treat Type 2 DM Demonstrate Reductions in Major Adverse Cardiovascular Events

Approximately one-third of patients in the United

Metabolic Syndrome and Chronic Kidney Disease

Prevention And Treatment of Diabetic Nephropathy. MOH Clinical Practice Guidelines 3/2006 Dr Stephen Chew Tec Huan

Diabetes: What is the scope of the problem?

Management of Hypertensive Chronic Kidney Disease: Role of Calcium Channel Blockers. Robert D. Toto, MD

NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR HEALTH AND CLINICAL EXCELLENCE. Proposed Health Technology Appraisal

Avances en nefroprotección en la enfermedad renal diabética Cómo prevenir sus complicaciones y cómo tratarlas

The Many Faces of T2DM in Long-term Care Facilities

Published trials point to a detrimental relationship

Changing the Course of Diabetes: Turning Hope into Reality

FRIDAY, JUNE 21. Epidemiology/ Genetics. Symposium The Big Picture Genetic Architecture of Diabetes Room S 103 B

Hypertension and diabetic nephropathy

Quality ID #119 (NQF 0062): Diabetes: Medical Attention for Nephropathy National Quality Strategy Domain: Effective Clinical Care

Learning Objectives. Impact of Diabetes II UPDATES IN TYPE 2 DIABETES. David Doriguzzi, PA-C

Agroup of clinicians, researchers, ... REPORT... Chronic Kidney Disease: Stating the Managed Care Case for Early Treatment

According to the US Renal Data System,

Comparative Effectiveness and Safety of Diabetes Medications for Adults with Type 2 Diabetes

Transcription:

KDIGO Controversies Conference on Management of Patients with Diabetes and Chronic Kidney Disease February 5-8, 2015 Vancouver, Canada Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) is an international organization whose mission is to improve the care and outcomes of kidney disease patients worldwide by promoting coordination, collaboration, and integration of initiatives to develop and implement clinical practice guidelines. Periodically, KDIGO hosts conferences on topics of importance to patients with kidney disease. These conferences are designed to review the state of the art on a focused subject and to ask conference participants to determine what needs to be done in this area to improve patient care and outcomes. Sometimes the recommendations from these conferences lead to KDIGO guideline efforts and other times they highlight areas for which additional research is needed to produce evidence that might lead to guidelines in the future. Background The prevalence of diabetes around the world has reached epidemic proportions. While diabetes is already estimated to affect more than 8% of the global population (more than 350 million people), this is projected to grow to over 550 million people by 2035. 1 It has been estimated that 40% or more of people with diabetes will develop chronic kidney disease, 2 including a significant number who will develop end- stage kidney disease (ESKD) requiring dialysis and transplantation. 1

Diabetes is already the leading cause of ESKD in most developed countries, and the growth in the number of people with ESKD around the world over recent decades has been driven primarily by growth in the number of people with diabetes as the underlying cause. 3,4 In addition, the presence of kidney disease is associated with a markedly increased risk of cardiovascular disease and death in people with diabetes. 5 In fact, data from the FinnDiane study suggest that the excess mortality associated with the presence of type 1 diabetes is observed entirely among those with kidney disease, while people with diabetes who do not have markers of kidney disease had outcomes similar to those observed in the general population. 6 Relevance of the topic and the conference As provision of dialysis to people with ESKD consumes approximately 6% of all health care costs in the US and more in some other countries 7, there is a strong economic imperative to improve outcomes for people with diabetes and kidney disease in addition to the strong personal and societal health rationale. While the identification of renin- angiotensin blockade as an effective strategy for the prevention of ESKD in type 1 and type 2 diabetes more than a decade ago was a major step forward, 8-10 subsequent research has had limited success at most in building upon these gains. A number of promising treatments have been found to be ineffective or harmful, many of which have now been abandoned in this population. These include dual renin- angiotensin- system blockade, 11-13 bardoxolone methyl, 14 the endothelin antagonist avosentan 15 and a number of others. A common feature of many of these failures was the emergence of unexpected adverse effects, highlighting the importance 2

of specific attention to this aspect for new therapies in future trials and also the importance of reconsidering what is known about the safety of existing treatments in this patient population. With a number of new agents targeting a variety of mechanistic approaches to improving outcomes for people with diabetes and kidney disease, it is timely to reflect on what has been learned in order to ensure that as much as possible is gained from previous studies and to better optimize both the care of affected patients, as well as the design of future research. This conference will therefore explore these issues in detail. 3

CONFERENCE OVERVIEW The objective of this KDIGO conference is to gather a global panel of multi- disciplinary clinical and scientific expertise (e.g., nephrology, cardiology, endocrinology) that will identify key issues relevant to the optimal management of diabetes in CKD. The goal is to assess our current state of knowledge related to antidiabetic agents for glycemic control and other potential therapies aiming to improve outcomes for people with diabetes and CKD; address key controversial issues concerning optimal management for the reduction of comorbidities such as cardiovascular diseases; summarize the outstanding knowledge gaps; and to propose a research agenda to resolve standing controversial issues. It is hoped that this conference will inform clinicians of the evidence base for present treatment options and help pave the way for future studies in this area. Drs. Per- Henrik Groop (Helsinki University Central Hospital, Finland) and Vlado Perkovic (George Institute for Global Health, Australia) will co- chair this conference. The format of the conference will involve topical plenary session presentations followed by focused discussion groups that will report back to the full group for consensus- building. Invited participants and speakers will include worldwide leading experts who will address key clinical issues as outlined in the Appendix: Scope of Coverage. The conference output will include publication of a position statement that will help guide KDIGO and others on therapeutic management and future research in this area. 4

References 1. http://www.idf.org/diabetesatlas. 2. Standards of medical care in diabetes- - 2014. Diabetes Care. 2014;37 Suppl 1:S14-80. 3. U.S. Renal Data System, USRDS 2013 Annual Data Report: Atlas of Chronic Kidney Disease and End- Stage Renal Disease in the United States, National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, Bethesda, MD, 2013: http://www.usrds.org/2013/pdf/v2_ch12_13.pdf, p. 340. 4. Villar E, Chang SH, McDonald SP. Incidences, treatments, outcomes, and sex effect on survival in patients with end- stage renal disease by diabetes status in Australia and New Zealand (1991 2005). Diabetes Care. 2007; 30(12):3070-3076. 5. Ninomiya T, Perkovic V, de Galan BE, et al. Albuminuria and kidney function independently predict cardiovascular and renal outcomes in diabetes. J Am Soc Nephrol. 2009; 20(8):1813-1821. 6. Groop PH, Thomas MC, Moran JL, et al. The presence and severity of chronic kidney disease predicts all- cause mortality in type 1 diabetes. Diabetes. 2009; 58(7):1651-1658. 7. U.S. Renal Data System, USRDS 2013 Annual Data Report: Atlas of Chronic Kidney Disease and End- Stage Renal Disease in the United States, National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, Bethesda, MD, 2013: http://www.usrds.org/2013/pdf/v2_ch11_13.pdf. 8. Brenner BM, Cooper ME, de Zeeuw D, et al. Effects of losartan on renal and cardiovascular outcomes in patients with type 2 diabetes and nephropathy. N Engl J Med. 2001; 345(12):861-869. 9. Lewis EJ, Hunsicker LG, Bain RP, Rohde RD. The effect of angiotensin- converting- enzyme inhibition on diabetic nephropathy. The Collaborative Study Group. N Engl J Med. 1993; 329(20):1456-1462. 10. Lewis EJ, Hunsicker LG, Clarke WR, et al. Renoprotective effect of the angiotensin- receptor antagonist irbesartan in patients with nephropathy due to type 2 diabetes. N Engl J Med. 2001; 345(12):851-860. 5

11. Fried LF, Emanuele N, Zhang JH, et al. Combined angiotensin inhibition for the treatment of diabetic nephropathy. N Engl J Med. 2013; 369(20):1892-1903. 12. Parving HH, Brenner BM, McMurray JJ, et al. Cardiorenal end points in a trial of aliskiren for type 2 diabetes. N Engl J Med. 2012; 367(23):2204-2213. 13. Wetzels JF. Renal outcomes in the ONTARGET study. Lancet. 2008;372(9655):2020; author reply 2020-2021. 14. de Zeeuw D, Akizawa T, Audhya P, et al. Bardoxolone methyl in type 2 diabetes and stage 4 chronic kidney disease. N Engl J Med. 2013; 369(26):2492-2503. 15. Mann JF, Green D, Jamerson K, et al. Avosentan for overt diabetic nephropathy. J Am Soc Nephrol. 2010; 21(3):527-535. 6

APPENDIX: SCOPE OF COVERAGE A. Safety of treatments in diabetes and kidney disease What is known (and what needs to be known) about the safety of: Existing glucose lowering agents used in diabetes and kidney disease, including: o Metformin o Sulfonylureas o Thiazolidinediones o Insulin Novel treatments under development, including: o DPP- 4 inhibitors o GLP- 1 agonists o SGLT2 inhibitors o Endothelin antagonists o Others Cardiovascular therapies, including: o Blood pressure- lowering agents o Lipid- lowering therapies o Antiplatelet agents and antithrombotics o Treatments for anemia How should the safety of agents being developed in this population be studied in the future? o What are the most important outcomes to be considered? o What should be required to achieve regulatory approval, and/or guideline recommendations? B. Efficacy of glycemic control Does glucose lowering per se prevent ESKD in people with diabetes and kidney disease? At what stage of kidney disease might this be best known or studied? Do specific classes of agents have particular nephroprotective or harmful effects? What is the impact of more intensive glycemic control on cardiovascular events in this population? Is there a similar or different effect on mortality? 7

What is the importance of hypoglycemia in this population? C. Therapies for protecting kidney function What treatments are proven to be effective at improving kidney function? What is the importance of short- term changes in kidney function induced by treatment? Which are the most promising agents or approaches that should be prioritized for future study? How should promising agents be identified and selected for outcome studies? D. Therapeutic effects on cardiovascular risk and other outcomes of interest Is there any new information that might change the conclusions of recent guidelines on blood pressure lowering and lipid modification in diabetes and CKD? What is known about the risk- benefit ratio of antithrombotic agents and anticoagulants in CKD? Are there new agents in development (e.g., CETP inhibitors, PSCK9 inhibitors, mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists) that might be particularly promising for people with diabetes and CKD? Do any new agents in development have important caveats that require specific study in people with diabetes and CKD? Are there any CKD- specific therapies that are effective at reducing cardiovascular risk in diabetes and CKD? 8