Does Dapagliflozin Regress Left Ventricular Hypertrophy In Patients With Type 2 Diabetes?
NCT ID: NCT02956811
Last Updated: 2019-07-09
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
PHASE4
66 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2017-02-14
2019-04-02
Brief Summary
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64 participants with type 2 diabetes and LVH will be recruited through the Scottish Diabetes Research Network (SDRN), Scottish Primary Care Research Network (SPCRN) and other routes, in this single centre study. Participants will be randomised to receive either 10mg dapagliflozin or placebo daily for 12 months. Cardiac MRI will be performed at baseline and at 12 months, this will be assessed for the primary outcome of change in left ventricular mass. Secondary outcomes will examine change in 24 hour blood pressure and weight.
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Detailed Description
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Since controlling BP and using an angiotensin enzyme inhibitor or angiotensin receptor blocker is only partially effective at regressing LVH, additional ways of regressing LVH are now required. Insulin resistance is another mediator of LVH. The literature is awash with observational studies linking insulin resistance to LVH. Pub Med identifies 67 such papers, 5 of which are inconclusive. In the remaining 62 papers, 46 identify a significant relationship between LVH and some measure of insulin resistance while 16 found no such relationship. The large studies are mostly positive which includes Framingham, the Whitehall trial, the Strong Heart trial and the Women's Health Initiative trial while the Hypertension Genetic Epidemiology Network (HyperGEN) trial is the one large negative trial. There are a multitude of mechanisms whereby hyperinsulinaemia should produce LVH e.g. through signalling pathways such as Akt, transforming growth factor and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors, through increased myocardial free fatty acid oxidation and through RAS activation causing sodium retention and thus increased cardiac preload. Therefore, it is likely that glycaemia contributes to LVH. However, reducing glycaemia per se appears to be insufficient to reduce CV events and key ancillary properties of each anti-glycaemic drug will be necessary to deliver the CV benefits we so badly need in diabetes.
A separate albeit related factor mediating LVH is obesity. Importantly, dapagliflozin has been shown to reduce weight. Thus the ideal treatment to regress LVH might be one that not only improves glycaemia but one that also aids weight loss. Dapagliflozin is the obvious option here since it has been shown to reduce both glycaemia and weight. Metformin is the only other anti-glycaemic which reduces both glycaemia and weight. Indeed the reason metformin reduces CV events in diabetes while other anti-glycaemic agents do not could well be in part because metformin reduces both glycaemia and weight which then reduce LVH (in fact we already have a separate British Heart Foundation grant to see if metformin really does reduce LV mass).
However dapagliflozin has other unique effects on the CV system which will impact on LVH. Dapagliflozin reduces blood pressure (LV afterload) and this by itself should also further reduce LVH. Further reducing BP even in normotensive patients has been shown to definitely regress LVH. Dapagliflozin also has diuretic effects which should reduce preload on the heart (this will be measured preload in this trial by MRI assessed end diastolic volume). The fact that dapagliflozin reduces both preload and afterload on the heart makes it uniquely promising as a way to reducing future CV events in patients with diabetes and, here, in reducing LV hypertrophy. Thus, dapagliflozin should regress LVH in patients with diabetes because it is unique in reducing the four main causes of LVH: glycaemia/insulin resistance, weight, preload and blood pressure. No other anti-diabetic medication alters even three of these. Even metformin only alters two since it does not change blood pressure. All other diabetic medications only reduce one (glycaemia) of these mediators of LVH. This may be why other new anti-glycaemic agents have failed to reduce CV events. In this trial, it is proposed to trial whether dapagliflozin causes regression of the independent cardiac risk factor of LVH in diabetic participants on optimal current evidence based therapy.
Original Hypothesis
Dapagliflozin will regress LVH in normotensive participants with type 2 diabetes.
RATIONALE FOR TRIAL
Cardiac MRI will be used to assess whether Dapagliflozin regresses LV mass more than placebo does over a one year treatment period. If it does, this would strongly suggest that Dapagliflozin will reduce CV events especially in the 44% of patients with type 2 diabetes who have LVH despite a controlled blood pressure.
All studies examining LVH regression require to be parallel group studies as effects on LV mass take 6-12 months to occur. Hence this is a parallel group, one year trial of the active drug vs. placebo.
The issue of what dapagliflozin does to CV events in diabetes is a hot topic. Most new antidiabetic drugs have been neutral or harmful but, judging by its pharmacological effects, it is quite possible that dapagliflozin might reduce CV events. A large ongoing trial (Dapagliflozin Effect on CardiovascuLAR Events - Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction (DECLARE - TIMI)) is just beginning to look at this. Why therefore do we also need to trial the effects of dapagliflozin on LV mass in those with LVH? If DECLARE-TIMI shows clearly that dapagliflozin reduces CV events, then our trial will have revealed a possible contributing mechanism to the reduced CV events i.e. LVH regression (patients in DECLARE-TIMI will not receive echocardiography so that subgroup analysis will not be able to answer this question and electrocardiograms are useless at identifying LVH. Furthermore, the accuracy of MRI over echo is so great that echo studies of LVH regression should no longer be considered reliable).
In other words, large mega-trials like DECLARE-TIMI are very valuable, but parallel smaller mechanistic studies like this can enhance their value by helping to explain the mechanisms producing the mega-trial results and/or helping to identify a subgroup who get a particular benefit meaning that the drug becomes more cost effective in that subgroup. Overall, this trial might, in conjunction with a mega-trial, help decide the course of future research (should LVH be a favoured target?) and help decide how to apply the results of a mega-trial in clinical practice.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
QUADRUPLE
Study Groups
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Active
Dapagliflozin 10mg once daily for 12 months
Dapagliflozin
SGLT2 inhibitor
Placebo
Placebo 10mg once daily for 12 months
Placebo
Matching Placebo
Interventions
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Dapagliflozin
SGLT2 inhibitor
Placebo
Matching Placebo
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. Diagnosed with type 2 diabetes mellitus based on the current American Diabetes Association guidelines.
3. Aged \>18 and \<80 years
4. Body Mass Index ≥23
5. HbA1c 48-85mmol/mol (last known result within in the previous 6 months)
7. Echocardiographic left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy (defined as an LV mass index of \>115g/m2 for men and \>95g/m2 for women indexed to body surface area or \>48g/m2.7 or \>44g/m2.7 when indexed to height) within the previous 6 months.
8. Women of childbearing potential must agree to take precautions to avoid pregnancy throughout the trial and for 4 weeks after intake of the last dose.
Exclusion Criteria
2. Participants with type 1 diabetes mellitus
3. Participants who have previously had an episode of diabetic ketoacidosis.
4. Serum Potassium or Sodium results outwith the normal range
5. Diagnosis of clinical heart failure
6. History of human immunodeficiency virus
7. LV systolic dysfunction (LVEF \<45%) (last known result within in the previous 6 months)
8. eGFR \<45ml/min (last known result within in the previous month)
9. Known liver function tests \>3 times upper limit of normal (based on last measures and documented laboratory measurement in the previous 6 months)
10. Body weight \>150Kg (unable to fit into a MRI scanner)
11. Contraindications to MRI (e.g. claustrophobia, metal implants, penetrative eye injury or exposure to metal fragments in eye requiring medical attention)
12. Past or current treatment with any SGLT2 inhibitor
13. Allergy to any SGLT2 inhibitor or lactose or galactose intolerance
14. Current treatment with loop diuretic
15. Currently receiving long term (\>30 consecutive days) treatment with an oral steroid
16. Pregnant or breast feeding participants
17. Involvement in the planning and/or conduct of the trial (applies to Astra Zeneca or representative staff and/or staff at the trial site).
18. Participation in another interventional study (other than observational trials and registries) within 30 days before visit 1.
19. Individuals considered at risk for poor protocol or medication compliance.
18 Years
80 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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NHS Tayside
OTHER_GOV
AstraZeneca
INDUSTRY
University of Dundee
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Allan Struthers, MD, FRCP
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
University of Dundee
Chim Lang, MD, FRCP
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University of Dundee
Graeme Houston, FRCR, MBBCh
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
University of Dundee
Rory McCrimmon, MBChB, MRCP
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
University of Dundee
Locations
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Ninewells Hospital
Dundee, , United Kingdom
Countries
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References
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Dihoum A, Brown AJ, McCrimmon RJ, Lang CC, Mordi IR. Dapagliflozin, inflammation and left ventricular remodelling in patients with type 2 diabetes and left ventricular hypertrophy. BMC Cardiovasc Disord. 2024 Jul 12;24(1):356. doi: 10.1186/s12872-024-04022-7.
Brown AJM, Gandy S, McCrimmon R, Houston JG, Struthers AD, Lang CC. A randomized controlled trial of dapagliflozin on left ventricular hypertrophy in people with type two diabetes: the DAPA-LVH trial. Eur Heart J. 2020 Sep 21;41(36):3421-3432. doi: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehaa419.
Brown AJM, Lang C, McCrimmon R, Struthers A. Does dapagliflozin regress left ventricular hypertrophy in patients with type 2 diabetes? A prospective, double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled study. BMC Cardiovasc Disord. 2017 Aug 23;17(1):229. doi: 10.1186/s12872-017-0663-6.
Other Identifiers
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2016-000715-33
Identifier Type: EUDRACT_NUMBER
Identifier Source: secondary_id
2015DM07
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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