Rewriting Diabetes Therapy: How Incretin Modulation is Transforming Cardiovascular and Renal Outcomes.
This narrative review synthesizes mechanistic and clinical trial evidence on incretin-based therapies — GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RA), DPP-4 inhibitors, and newer dual/triple agonists — for cardiovascular (CV) and renal protection in type 2 diabetes (T2DM) and related conditions. The authors draw on multiple pivotal randomized cardiovascular outcome trials (CVOTs), including SELECT (semaglutide in obesity without diabetes), FLOW (semaglutide in chronic kidney disease), SOUL (oral semaglutide in T2DM with ASCVD/CKD), and SURPASS-CVOT (tirzepatide vs. dulaglutide). Key findings attributed to these trials include reductions in major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE), CV and all-cause mortality, heart-failure hospitalization, and hard kidney endpoints across GLP-1RA programs. A 2019 pooled analysis and a 2025 update reportedly confirm these cardiorenal benefits independent of baseline HbA1c. Mechanistically, the review describes GLP-1R signaling via Gs-cAMP/PKA, β-arrestin, and Gq pathways, linked to anti-inflammatory, natriuretic, and antifibrotic effects. Oral small-molecule GLP-1R agonists (e.g., orforglipron) showed phase 2 efficacy but lacked long-term outcome data at time of publication. As a narrative review, it is subject to selection bias and does not conduct formal meta-analytic pooling.
Why this grade: This is a narrative review synthesizing mechanistic and RCT-level evidence; it does not generate primary human data and is subject to author selection bias inherent to the review format.
Introduction In patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), cardiovascular (CV) disease and chronic kidney disease (CKD) drive excess morbidity and mortality. Beyond glucose-lowering, incretin-based therapies may provide organ protection across the cardiorenal axis. Methods Narrative review of mechanistic pathways and randomized trials of GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RA), DPP-4 inhibitors, and newer dual/triple agonists, with targeted updates from recent pivotal programs (SELECT, FLOW, SOUL, SURPASS-CVOT) and emerging oral small-molecule GLP-1R agonists. Results Long-acting GLP-1RA reduces major adverse CV events (MACE), all-cause and CV death, heart-failure hospitalization, and kidney composites across CV outcome trials and meta-analyses. A 2019 pooled analysis and a 2025 update confirm consistent reductions in MACE and hard kidney outcomes independent of baseline HbA1c. In obesity without diabetes, semaglutide 2.4 mg lowered MACE in SELECT, expanding prevention beyond glycemia. In CKD with T2DM, FLOW showed that semaglutide reduced major kidney disease events and death from CV/kidney causes. In T2DM with ASCVD and/or CKD, the SOUL cardiovascular outcome trial (CVOT) demonstrated that oral semaglutide reduced three-point MACE versus placebo. In head-to-head CVOT, tirzepatide was non-inferior to dulaglutide on MACE while achieving greater weight and HbA1c reductions. Mechanistically, GLP-1R signaling spans Gs-cAMP/PKA, β-arrestin-dependent pathways, and additional routes (including Gq contexts), aligning with anti-inflammatory, natriuretic, and antifibrotic effects observed preclinically and clinically. Oral non-peptide GLP-1R agonists (e.g., orforglipron) show phase 2 efficacy but lack long-term CV/renal outcome data. Conclusions Incretin-based therapy has shifted care from glucose-centric targets to cardiorenal risk reduction. GLP-1RA are guideline-endorsed for patients with T2DM and high CV/renal risk irrespective of HbA1c; dual agonists and oral small-molecule agents may broaden indications pending definitive outcome evidence.
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