FDA/CDC

FDA adds diabetic kidney disease, heart failure indications to canagliflozin


 

The Food and Drug Administration has approved canagliflozin (Invokana) for the treatment of diabetic kidney disease and for reduction of the risk of hospitalization for heart failure in patients with type 2 diabetes and diabetic kidney disease, which makes it the first drug indicated for diabetic kidney disease treatment in 20 years.

FDA icon

FDA approval, which was announced in a press release by Janssen, the drug’s manufacturer, is based on results from the phase 3 CREDENCE trial. In that study patients with type 2 diabetes and chronic diabetic kidney disease received either 100 mg canagliflozin or placebo. Patients who received canagliflozin experienced a 30% reduction in the risk of the primary composite endpoint, which included end-stage kidney disease, doubling of serum creatinine, and renal or cardiovascular death. The risk of secondary outcomes were also reduced in patients receiving canagliflozin, including a 39% reduction in the risk of hospitalization for heart failure.

The most common adverse events associated with canagliflozin, according to the label, are female genital mycotic infections, urinary tract infection, and increased urination. Serious adverse events associated with canagliflozin include ketoacidosis, kidney problems, serious urinary tract infections, hypoglycemia, necrotizing fasciitis, serious allergic reaction, and bone fractures.

“The real battle to turn the tide on kidney disease is in early detection and slowing its progression so that patients stay healthier and fewer patients reach kidney failure,” LaVerne A. Burton, president and CEO of the American Kidney Fund, said in the press release. “We are so grateful that advances in kidney disease research are producing treatment options that help to slow the progression of diabetic kidney disease and reduce the risk of hospitalization for heart failure.”

Find the full press release on the Janssen website.

Recommended Reading

ICU admissions raise chronic condition risk
The Hospitalist
Newer antihyperglycemic drugs have distinctive CV, kidney benefits
The Hospitalist
SGLT2 inhibitors prevent HF hospitalization regardless of baseline LVEF
The Hospitalist
Aspirin shows little benefit for primary prevention of vascular disease in diabetes
The Hospitalist
FDA issues warning on insulin pump cybersecurity weakness
The Hospitalist
FDA approves Baqsimi nasal powder for emergency hypoglycemia treatment
The Hospitalist
Dapagliflozin meets primary endpoint in the DAPA-HF trial
The Hospitalist
Ticagrelor: Modest benefit, bigger bleed risk in diabetes plus stable CAD
The Hospitalist
DAPA-HF results transform dapagliflozin from antidiabetic to heart failure drug
The Hospitalist
Machine learning–derived risk score predicts heart failure risk in diabetes patients
The Hospitalist
   Comments ()