Current study will render insight in to the role of renal hypoxia in the diabetic kidney and is able to associate its finding with measurements of renal perfusion and glomerular filtration rate. Moreover, this research will focus on the effects of sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 inhibition on renal tissue oxygenation and oxygen consumption as well as a change in intrarenal hemodynamics and perfusion, and a shift of fuel metabolites. Elucidation the mechanisms underlying the effects of SGLT2 inhibition will advance our knowledge and contribute to their optimal clinical utilization in the treatment of chronic kidney disease in diabetes and possibly beyond.
Sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitors (SGLT2-i) are a relatively new class of drugs in the treatment of diabetes and improve glycemic control by blocking SGLT-2 in the proximal tubule, the main transporter of coupled sodium-glucose reabsorption Three large cardiovascular outcome trials (EMPA-REG, CANVAS, DECLARE- TIMI 58) showed SGLT-2 inhibition to have a renoprotective effect, including on renal outcomes. Moreover, the recently publicized CREDENCE trial concluded early after the planned interim analyses showed a striking renoprotective effect of SGLT-2 inhibition in patients with T2DM and CKD. The mechanisms underlying their beneficial effects remain to be elucidated, as the small SGLT-2 induced reduction in glucose level (0.5% HbA1c), bodyweight (about 3%), systolic blood pressure (about 4 mmHg), or uric acid (about 6%) are insufficient to fully account for the effect. The pathological mechanisms underlying DKD involve complex interactions between metabolic and haemodynamic factors which are not fully understood. However, accumulating evidence of foremost animal studies indicates that a chronic state of renal tissue hypoxia is the final common pathway in the development and progression of diabetic kidney disease. Therefore several hypothesis have been proposed on the alleviation of chronic tissue hypoxia following SGLT-2 inhibition: (1) A decrease in workload by a decrease in GFR. (2) A shift in renal fuel energetics by increasing ketone body oxidation, which renders high ATP/oxygen consumption ratio's compared to glucose or free fatty acids. (3) An improvement of cardiac function and systemic hemodynamics to lead to an increase in renal perfusion, and (4) an increase in erythropoietin (EPO) levels to stimulate oxygen delivery. Current study will examine the above hypothesis by researching renal oxygenation by BOLD-MRI, oxygen consumption by PET-CT, and hemodynamic kinetics by the Iohexol clearance method/contrast-enhance ultrasound/arterial spin labeling. Blood sampling will allow for the measurement of EPO and ketone bodies, as well as a resting energy expenditure will elucidate a shift in use of energy substrate metabolism. The research will be performed in T2DM without overt kidney disease (n=20) before and after a 4 week treatment with SGLT-2 inhibition (ertugliflozin), and will be compared the obtained results from healthy controls (n=20).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
40
Once daily treatment with oral ertugliflozin 15mg for 4 consecutive weeks
VU University Medical Center
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Renal oxygenation measured by BOLD-MRI (R2*)
Renal (separated as cortical and medullar) oxygenation measured by BOLD-MRI (R2\*)
Time frame: After 4 week treatment with ertugliflozin 15mg QD versus placebo
Renal oxygen consumption by PET/CT-scan using 11C-Acetate
Renal oxygen consumption will be measured by PET/CT-scan using 11C-Acetate and compartment model parameter k2
Time frame: After 4 week treatment with active drug intervention versus placebo
Renal hemodynamics
GFR and ERPF
Time frame: After 4 week treatment with active drug intervention versus placebo
Renal efficiency
Measured as sodium reabsorption divided by oxygen consumption
Time frame: After 4 week treatment with active drug intervention versus placebo
Cortical blood flow
measured by contrast-enhanced ultrasound
Time frame: After 4 week treatment with active drug intervention versus placebo
Renal arterial blood flow
measured by arterial spin labelling
Time frame: After 4 week treatment with active drug intervention versus placebo
Acute 24-hour sodium and glucose excretion
24-hour sodium and glucose excretion after 2 days * Urine osmolality * Urinary pH
Time frame: After 2 days of treatment with active drug intervention versus placebo
Chronic 24-hour sodium and glucose excretion
24-hour sodium and glucose excretion after 4 weeks
Time frame: After 4 week treatment with active drug intervention versus placebo
Renal tubular function: Urinary pH
Urinary pH
Time frame: After 4 week treatment with active drug intervention versus placebo
Renal tubular function: Urine Osmolality
Urine osmolality
Time frame: After 4 week treatment with active drug intervention versus placebo
Renal tubular function: sodium transport
Iohexol corrected sodium excretion
Time frame: After 4 week treatment with active drug intervention versus placebo
Renal damage markers
Renal damage markers will include: urinary albumin excretion in 24-hour urine samples and other markers depending on relevant (emerging) metabolic and humoral biomarkers of renal damage, conditional to available budget.
Time frame: After 4 week treatment with active drug intervention versus placebo
Changes in plasma energy substrate: glucose
Changes in plasma energy substrate: glucose
Time frame: After 4 week treatment with active drug intervention versus placebo
Changes in plasma energy substrate: free fatty acids
Changes in plasma energy substrate: free fatty acids
Time frame: After 4 week treatment with active drug intervention versus placebo
Changes in plasma energy substrate: ketone bodies
Changes in plasma energy substrate: ketone bodies
Time frame: After 4 week treatment with active drug intervention versus placebo
Changes in plasma energy substrate:triglycerides
Changes in plasma energy substrate:triglycerides
Time frame: After 4 week treatment with active drug intervention versus placebo
Energy expenditure
By resting energy expenditure
Time frame: After 4 week treatment with active drug intervention versus placebo
Changes in erythropoietin (EPO) levels
Changes in erythropoietin (EPO) levels
Time frame: After 4 week treatment with active drug intervention versus placebo
Insulin sensitivity
OGIS and Matsuda Index during an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT)
Time frame: After 4 week treatment with active drug intervention versus placebo
Beta-cell function
Beta-cell function will be derived from HOMA-B modelling during an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT).
Time frame: After 4 week treatment with active drug intervention versus placebo
Peripheral insulin extraction
Arterial-venous difference before and following an OGTT
Time frame: After 4 week treatment with active drug intervention versus placebo
Total insulin extraction
Arterial-venous difference before and following an OGTT
Time frame: After 4 week treatment with active drug intervention versus placebo
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.