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GLP-1 agonists in the treatment of chronic kidney disease in type 2 diabetes and obesity.

Cooper ME, van Raalte DH.
The Journal of clinical investigation · November 3, 2025
Plain-language summary

This review examines the role of glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs) in kidney protection among people living with type 2 diabetes and obesity. The authors trace the evolution of GLP-1 research from its original characterization as a metabolic hormone—regulating insulin secretion, suppressing glucagon, and reducing insulin resistance partly through weight loss—toward a broader understanding of its effects on kidney physiology and clinical outcomes. The review summarizes preclinical data alongside landmark clinical trial findings, noting that renoprotective effects have been observed despite only modest GLP-1 receptor expression in the kidney. Key clinical outcomes discussed include changes in albuminuria, estimated glomerular filtration rate decline, and cardiovascular-renal endpoints drawn from large outcomes trials. The authors frame GLP-1 RAs as an area of intensive ongoing investigation for chronic kidney disease management in the relevant patient population. As a narrative review, this paper does not conduct original data collection or meta-analysis, and conclusions are therefore subject to the selection and interpretation choices of the authors. It provides a useful synthesis of the existing evidence base but does not itself constitute primary clinical trial data.

Why this grade: This is a narrative review synthesizing preclinical and clinical literature rather than a primary study or meta-analysis, so it is graded as review-level evidence.

Ask the literature about GLP-1
Abstract

Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) was initially considered to be a hormone with a predominant role in regulating glucose metabolism by inducing insulin secretion, reducing glucagon secretion, and ameliorating insulin resistance, with the last effect being largely dependent on the induction of weight loss. In more recent years, the role of this peptide beyond metabolism has progressively been explored, including its impact on kidney physiology and kidney clinical outcomes in people with obesity with or without diabetes. Indeed, despite only modest expression of the GLP-1 receptor in the kidney, the renoprotective actions of GLP-1 and its receptor agonists have become an area of intensive investigation. This Review appraises the current status of GLP-1 peptide and its receptor agonists and focuses on the preclinical as well as recent seminal clinical findings defining the kidney benefits conferred by GLP-1 receptor agonist treatment in people living with type 2 diabetes and obesity.

Educational summary of published research — not medical advice. License: cc by. Full text is shown only where licensing permits.