Twenty-Four Hour Blood Pressure Response to Empagliflozin and Its Determinants in Normotensive Non-diabetic Subjects

Sodium-glucose co-transport 2 inhibitors (SGLT2i) lower blood pressure (BP) in normotensive subjects and in hypertensive and normotensive diabetic and non-diabetic patients. However, the mechanisms of these BP changes are not fully understood. Therefore, we examined the clinical and biochemical dete...

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Published inFrontiers in cardiovascular medicine Vol. 9; p. 854230
Main Authors Zanchi, Anne, Pruijm, Menno, Muller, Marie-Eve, Ghajarzadeh-Wurzner, Arlène, Maillard, Marc, Dufour, Nathalie, Bonny, Olivier, Wuerzner, Grégoire, Burnier, Michel
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 22.03.2022
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Summary:Sodium-glucose co-transport 2 inhibitors (SGLT2i) lower blood pressure (BP) in normotensive subjects and in hypertensive and normotensive diabetic and non-diabetic patients. However, the mechanisms of these BP changes are not fully understood. Therefore, we examined the clinical and biochemical determinants of the BP response to empagliflozin based on 24-h ambulatory BP monitoring. In this analysis of a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study examining the renal effects of empagliflozin 10 mg vs. placebo in untreated normotensive non-diabetic subjects, the 1-month changes in 24 h ambulatory BP were analyzed in 39 subjects (13 placebo/26 empagliflozin) in regard to changes in biochemical and hormonal parameters. At 1 month, empagliflozin 10 mg decreased 24-h systolic (SBP) and diastolic (DBP) BP significantly by -5 ± 7 mmHg ( < 0.001) and -2 ± 6 mmHg ( = 0.03). The effect on SBP and DBP was more pronounced during nighttime (resp. -6 ± 11 mmHg, = 0.004; -4 ± 7 mmHg, = 0.007). The main determinants of daytime and nighttime SBP and DBP responses were baseline BP levels (for daytime SBP: coefficient -0.5; adj. R : 0.36; = 0.0007; for night-time SBP: coefficient -0.6; adj. R : 0.33; = 0.001). Although empaglifozin induced significant biochemical changes, none correlated with blood pressure changes including urinary sodium, lithium, glucose and urate excretion and free water clearance. Plasma renin activity and plasma aldosterone levels increased significantly at 1 month suggesting plasma volume contraction, while plasma metanephrine and copeptin levels remained the same. Renal resistive indexes did not change with empagliflozin. SGLT2 inhibition lowers daytime and nighttime ambulatory systolic and diastolic BP in normotensive non-diabetic subjects. Twenty-four jour changes are pronounced and comparable to those described in diabetic or hypertensive subjects. Baseline ambulatory BP was the only identified determinant of systolic and diastolic BP response. This suggests that still other factors than sustained glycosuria or proximal sodium excretion may contribute to the resetting to lower blood pressure levels with SGLT2 inhibition. [https://www.clinicaltrials.gov], identifier [NCT03093103].
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Reviewed by: Massimo Salvetti, University of Brescia, Italy; Davide Fabbricatore, Federico II University Hospital, Italy
Edited by: Guido Iaccarino, University of Naples Federico II, Italy
This article was submitted to Hypertension, a section of the journal Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine
ISSN:2297-055X
2297-055X
DOI:10.3389/fcvm.2022.854230