Abstract
The role of sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitors in preventing heart failure (HF) in people with type 2 diabetes (T2DM) is now part of current treatment recommendations. Two large clinical trials (DAPA-HF and EMPEROR-Reduced) have recently highlighted the important impact of SGLT2 inhibitors in patients with HF and a reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF), with significant outcome benefits on HF hospitalisations and cardiovascular mortality, and similar effects in patients with and without T2DM. These benefits were observed on top of excellent background HF therapy, and there were no treatment interactions between SGLT2 inhibitors and background HF therapy. There were no increases in adverse events of interest in the SGLT2 inhibitor arm, including volume depletion, adverse renal events, hypoglycemia, amputation, and ketoacidosis, demonstrating the favourable safety profile of this treatment in HFrEF. Approximately 40%-50% of patients with HFrEF have chronic kidney disease (CKD), and the recently reported results of the DAPA-CKD trial indicate that dapagliflozin can prevent renal and cardiovascular outcomes in patients with established CKD, whether diabetes is present or not. Although the mechanisms of action of SGLT2 inhibitors are not fully understood, the hypotheses that have been proposed for their HF outcome benefits include a reduction of preload via osmotic diuresis, lowering of afterload, reduction in myocardial mass, alteration of myocardial energy substrate toward a more efficient glucose metabolism, modulation of renal sympathetic afferent tone, and increased erythropoiesis. We here present a summary of the evidence as well as a practical perspective on prescribing SGLT2 inhibitors in patients with HFrEF, with or without diabetes.
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