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Hypertension in diabetes care: emerging roles of recent hypoglycemic agents

Journal

HYPERTENSION RESEARCH
Volume 44, Issue 8, Pages 897-905

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41440-021-00665-7

Keywords

Hypoglycemic agent; Type 2 diabetes; Blood pressure; Multimorbidity; Polypharmacy

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New hypoglycemic agents not only improve blood sugar control for patients with type 2 diabetes, but also provide significant cardiovascular and renal benefits, including notable reductions in blood pressure. These agents have multifaceted advantages that offer an important comprehensive therapeutic approach to improve prognosis in patients with type 2 diabetes.
Patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D) frequently have multiple cardiovascular, metabolic, and renal comorbidities, such as hypertension, dyslipidemia, hyperuricemia, chronic kidney disease, and heart failure. Accordingly, this patient population often requires polypharmacy, which is associated with an increased risk of drug-drug interactions, poor adherence, and even adverse outcomes. Accumulating evidence on newer hypoglycemic agents, such as glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists and sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitors, has highlighted the marked improvements in cardiovascular and renal outcomes associated with the off-target benefits for relevant comorbidities, including hypertension. These classes of hypoglycemic agents are unique, as they achieve consistently modest but significant reductions in systolic and diastolic blood pressure (BP), an effect that has not been targeted and observed with conventional hypoglycemic agents. In addition to this BP-lowering effect, these agents also have multifaceted beneficial impacts on other cardiometabolic and renal parameters, which appear to be helpful for providing an important comprehensive therapeutic approach to improve the prognosis in patients with T2D. The clinical advantages of these agents may reduce the dose and number of concomitant medications used to treat T2D and related comorbidities. These positive spillover effects may also enhance the clinical use of agents to achieve better diabetes care. As a consequence, the clinical significance of these hypoglycemic agents now extends beyond their hypoglycemic effects, thereby providing a new-normal strategy to use in an evidence-based, patient-centric approach to diabetes care.

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