Diabetes drug curbs heart failure risk: Breaking News
A Type-2 diabetes drug significantly reduces hospitalizations and death
from heart failure, show results of a clinical trial. The researchers also
found that the drug has the potential to prevent heart failure in diabetic
patients who never had the condition before.
"One
conclusion that could be proposed is that the drug not only appeared to prevent
deterioration in patients who already had heart failure but also appeared to
prevent that condition from developing in patients who never had it
before," said one of the researchers Silvio Inzucchi, professor at Yale School
of Medicine in New Haven in the US.
Many
individuals with Type-2 diabetes also have heart failure, a condition in which
the heart fails to pump blood effectively. Treatment for heart failure is
limited and prior efforts to treat patients with Type-2 diabetes drugs showed
no benefit for heart failure. But a new
class of Type-2 diabetes drugs (SGLT2 inhibitors) that reduce blood sugar by
increasing its excretion in the urine had not been studied.
In the
new trial, patients with Type-2 diabetes and risk factors for heart disease
were randomised to receive once-daily doses of either the glucose-lowering drug
empagliflozin (10 mg or 25 mg doses), or a placebo.
The
drug or placebo was given in addition to standard care. At the end of the trial
period, investigators found that patients treated with the drug experienced
reductions in blood sugar and blood pressure, as well as weight loss, compared
to those on placebo.
They
also found major significant reductions in hospitalisations for heart failure (35
percent). The findings were presented at the 2015 American Heart Association
(AHA) scientific session in Orlando, Florida.
Diabetes drug curbs heart failure risk: Breaking News
Reviewed by Anonymous
on
November 10, 2015
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