Abstract

BackgroundDapagliflozin (DAPA), a sodium-glucose transporter 2 inhibitor (SGLT2i), attenuates kidney outcomes in patients with not only diabetes mellitus (DM) but also chronic kidney disease (CKD). SGLT2i-derived initial dip in estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) has been considered to reduce excess glomerular pressure, followed by renal protection in patients with DM. However, whether DAPA confers the eGFR dip and its independent determinants for CKD patients without DM are unclear.MethodsA total of 126 patients with CKD treated with 10 mg DAPA daily was retrospectively registered. After participants with missing data and DM were excluded, 51 participants were enrolled.ResultsAn initial eGFR dip was observed 1 month after initiation of DAPA, which was sustained until 2 months. DAPA did not affect urinary protein excretion; however, serum uric acid was decreased, while hemoglobin level was increased. Multiple regression analysis revealed that eGFR at baseline was the only independent determinant of the initial dip of eGFR. The patients currently showing exacerbation of glomerular hyperfiltration exhibited the larger initial eGFR dip rather than those showing progressive renal dysfunction. The patients meeting exclusion criteria of DAPA-CKD trial exhibited same degree of the initial eGFR dip as others.ConclusionsDAPA causes an initial dip of eGFR in CKD patients without DM at 1 month after starting DAPA treatment. A higher eGFR at baseline predicts a large initial eGFR dip, which might be linked to the subsequent recovery in eGFR in CKD patients without DM.

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