Albiglutide and atrial fibrillation in patients with type 2 diabetes and established cardiovascular disease - insights from the Harmony Outcomes trial.
Konstantin A Krychtiuk, Guillaume Marquis-Gravel, Shannon Murphy, Karen Chiswell, Jennifer B Green, Lawrence A Leiter, Renato D Lopes, Stefano Del Prato, John J V McMurray, Adrian F Hernandez, Christopher B Granger
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: Atrial fibrillation and flutter (AF) are common in patients with type 2 diabetes and are associated with worse outcomes.
Methods: Harmony Outcomes was a multicenter, event-driven, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial comparing the effects of albiglutide, a glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP1) receptor agonist, with placebo on a composite of major adverse cardiac events (MACE; non-fatal myocardial infarction; non-fatal stroke and cardiovascular death) in 9,463 patients aged >40years with type-2 diabetes and established cardiovascular disease. Herein, the cardiovascular effects of albiglutide in patients with and without AF, as well as the effects on AF events during follow-up, were analyzed.
Results: Patients with a history of AF (8.9%) exhibited a higher event rate for the primary composite MACE endpoint during 1.6 years of follow-up (12.7 vs. 6.3 events/100 person-years, adjusted hazard ratio (aHR)1.41 (95% Confidence Interval (CI)1.14-1.74, p=0.001). Treatment with albiglutide reduced the occurrence of the primary endpoint irrespective of history of AF at baseline (history of AF: aHR0.83 (0.58-1.19), no history of AF: aHR0.77 (0.66-0.90); pinteraction=0.71). During follow-up, 239 patients (2.5%) experienced an AF event. Overall, Albiglutide was associated with numerically fewer AF events (108 vs 131; HR 0.82 (0.63-1.06, p=0.12), irrespective of baseline history of AF (pinteraction=0.92).
Conclusions: In patients with type 2 diabetes, treatment with albiglutide, compared to placebo, reduced the risk of cardiovascular events irrespective of history of AF. Further, albiglutide treatment did not increase AF adverse events but was associated with a trend to a lower rate of AF events during follow-up without reaching statistical significance.
期刊介绍:
European Journal of Preventive Cardiology (EJPC) is an official journal of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) and the European Association of Preventive Cardiology (EAPC). The journal covers a wide range of scientific, clinical, and public health disciplines related to cardiovascular disease prevention, risk factor management, cardiovascular rehabilitation, population science and public health, and exercise physiology. The categories covered by the journal include classical risk factors and treatment, lifestyle risk factors, non-modifiable cardiovascular risk factors, cardiovascular conditions, concomitant pathological conditions, sport cardiology, diagnostic tests, care settings, epidemiology, pharmacology and pharmacotherapy, machine learning, and artificial intelligence.