Acute Kidney Injury, Renal Impairment and Renal Failure Associated with
Sodium Glucose Co-transporter-2 Inhibitors in At-Risk Groups: A
Systematic Review
Abstract
Introduction Randomised controlled trials show a reduction in acute
kidney injury, renal impairment, and acute renal failure after
initiation of a sodium glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitor. Observational
literature on the association is conflicting, however important to
understand for populations with a higher risk of medication-related
adverse renal events. We aimed to systematically review the literature
to summarize the association between sodium glucose cotransporter-2
inhibitor use and acute kidney injury, renal impairment, and acute renal
failure in three at-risk groups: older people aged >65
years, people with heart failure, and people with reduced renal
function. Methods Data Sources: A systematic search of Embase
(1974–29/03/21) and PubMed (1946–29/03/21) was performed. Study
Selection: RCTs and observational studies were included if they reported
numbers of acute kidney injury or acute renal failure in people using
sodium glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitors, compared to other diabetic
therapies. Studies needed to report results by level of renal function,
heart failure status, or age. Results Of 858 results, 6 studies were
included. The absolute risk of acute kidney injury or acute renal
failure was higher in people >65 years compared to those
<65 years, higher in people with heart failure (vs. without),
and higher in people with reduced kidney function (vs. preserved kidney
function), but insufficient evidence to determine if the relative effect
of sodium glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitors on this risk was similar
for each group. Conclusion At risk cohorts are associated with a higher
incidence of acute kidney problems in users of sodium glucose
cotransporter-2 inhibitors.