A little more than one year after posting landmark data, Janssen’s Invokana snagged another regulatory approval
to reduce the risk of end-stage kidney disease, cardiovascular death
and worsening of kidney function in adults with type 2 diabetes and
diabetic kidney disease.
On Monday, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) awarded
Invokana with the new indication. Specifically, the FDA approved
Invokana (canagliflozin) as a treatment to reduce the risk of end-stage kidney disease
(ESKD), worsening of kidney function, cardiovascular death, and
hospitalization for heart failure in adults with type 2 diabetes and
diabetic kidney disease (nephropathy) with a certain amount of protein
in the urine. The approvals marks Invokana as the only type 2 diabetes
medicine indicated to both treat diabetic kidney disease and reduce the
risk of hospitalization for heart failure in patients with T2D and
diabetic kidney disease (DKD). T2D is the leading cause of kidney
disease in the United States and the fifth fastest-growing cause of
death around the world, Janssen noted in its announcement.
James
List, global therapeutic head for cardiovascular & metabolism at
Janssen Research & Development, touted the approval as a significant
new treatment option for diabetic patients. He said the approval
“addresses serious unmet needs and could change the trajectory of care
for the many millions of patients living with type 2 diabetes and
diabetic kidney disease.”
The approval was based on the landmark CREDENCE trial
after Invokana demonstrated a 30% reduction in the risk of the primary
composite endpoint, which was comprised of progression to doubling of
serum creatinine, ESKD and renal or CV death. Invokana reduced the risk
of CV death and hospitalization for heart failure by 31%. The medication
also reduced major adverse CV events, including nonfatal stroke and CV
death, by 20%. The risk of hospitalization for heart failure was reduced
by 39%. Also, the CREDENCE study showed no imbalance in amputation or
bone fracture, Janssen said.
In the United States, one in three people with T2D has DKD, which
multiplies the risk of cardiovascular complications including heart
failure and CV death, and puts patients on a trajectory to dialysis and
kidney transplant. With this approval, Invokana is the only type 2
diabetes medicine indicated to reduce the risk of hospitalization for
heart failure in patients with T2D and DKD, and is the first new
treatment option in nearly 20 years indicated to slow the progression of
DKD in these patients, Janssen said.
CREDENCE study investigator George Bakris, director of the
Comprehensive Hypertension Center at the University of Chicago, said
millions of type 2 diabetes patients have DKD and most are not aware of
the situation. By the time it is diagnosed, Bakris said the patients
have progressed to the point where dialysis is inevitable.
“For nearly two decades, we’ve been searching for a treatment that
can help us intervene earlier to slow kidney disease progression. With
the approval for this new indication for Invokana, physicians will not
only be able to help reduce the risks associated with diabetic kidney
disease, but also reduce the risk of hospitalization for heart failure
in patients with T2D and DKD,” Bakris said in a statement.
Invokana, a sodium glucose co-transporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitors, has
previously been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration as a
treatment to improve glycemic control in adults with type 2 diabetes.
SGLT2s are proteins found in the kidneys that are important in the
reabsorption of glucose by the kidneys. The drug does come with a black
box warning for an increased risk of lower-limb amputations. In the
CREDENCE trial, Janssen said there was no imbalance in lower limb
amputation or bone fracture in this trial and no new safety signals were
identified.
https://www.biospace.com/article/janssen-s-invokana-snags-approval-to-treat-diabetes-related-kidney-disease/
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