Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease (Feb 2024)

Primary and Secondary Cardiovascular and Kidney Prevention With Canagliflozin: Insights From the CANVAS Program and CREDENCE Trial

  • Abhinav Sharma,
  • Amir Razaghizad,
  • Abdulaziz Joury,
  • Adeera Levin,
  • Harpreet S. Bajaj,
  • G. B. John Mancini,
  • Norman C. Wong,
  • April Slee,
  • Fernando G. Ang,
  • Wally Rapattoni,
  • Brendon L. Neuen,
  • Clare Arnott,
  • Vlado Perkovic,
  • Kenneth W. Mahaffey

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.123.031586
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 3

Abstract

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Background This study evaluated the effects of canagliflozin in patients with type 2 diabetes with and without prevalent cardiovascular disease (secondary and primary prevention). Methods and Results This was a pooled participant‐level analysis of the CANVAS (Canagliflozin Cardiovascular Assessment Study) Program and CREDENCE (Canagliflozin and Renal Events in Diabetes With Established Nephropathy Clinical Evaluation) trial. The CANVAS Program included participants with type 2 diabetes at elevated cardiovascular risk, whereas the CREDENCE trial included participants with type 2 diabetes and albuminuric chronic kidney disease. Hazard ratios (HRs) with interaction terms were obtained from Cox regression models to estimate relative risk reduction with canagliflozin versus placebo across the primary and secondary prevention groups. We analyzed 5616 (38.9%) and 8804 (61.1%) individuals in the primary and secondary prevention subgroups, respectively. Primary versus secondary prevention participants were on average younger (62.2 versus 63.8 years of age) and more often women (42% versus 31%). Canagliflozin reduced the risk of major adverse cardiovascular events (HR, 0.84 [95% CI, 0.76–0.94]) consistently across primary and secondary prevention subgroups (Pinteraction=0.86). Similarly, no treatment effect heterogeneity was observed with canagliflozin for hospitalization for heart failure, cardiovascular death, end‐stage kidney disease, or all‐cause mortality (all Pinteraction>0.5). Conclusions Canagliflozin reduced cardiovascular and kidney outcomes with no statistical evidence of heterogeneity for the treatment effect across the primary and secondary prevention subgroups in the CANVAS Program and CREDENCE trial. Although studies on the optimal implementation of canagliflozin within these populations are warranted, these results reinforce canagliflozin's role in cardiorenal prevention and treatment in individuals with type 2 diabetes. Registration URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifiers: NCT01032629, NCT01989754, NCT02065791.

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