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Abstract
<p class="first" id="P1">Type 2 diabetes (T2D), chronic kidney disease (CKD), atherosclerotic
cardiovascular
disease (ASCVD), and heart failure (HF)—along with their associated risk factors—have
overlapping etiologies, and two or more of these conditions frequently occur in the
same patient. Many recent cardiovascular outcome trials (CVOTs) have demonstrated
the benefits of agents originally developed to control T2D, ASCVD, or CKD risk factors,
and these agents have transcended their primary indications to confer benefits across
a range of conditions. This evolution in CVOT evidence calls for practice recommendations
that are not constrained by a single discipline to help clinicians manage patients
with complex conditions involving diabetes, cardiorenal, and/or metabolic (DCRM) diseases.
The ultimate goal for these recommendations is to be comprehensive yet succinct and
easy to follow by the nonexpert—whether a specialist or a primary care clinician.
To meet this need, we formed a volunteer task force comprising leading cardiologists,
nephrologists, endocrinologists, and primary care physicians to develop the DCRM Practice
Recommendations, a multispecialty consensus on the comprehensive management of the
patient with complicated metabolic disease. The task force recommendations are based
on strong evidence and incorporate practical guidance that is clinically relevant
and simple to implement, with the aim of improving outcomes in patients with DCRM.
The recommendations are presented as 18 separate graphics covering lifestyle therapy,
patient self-management education, technology for DCRM management, prediabetes, cognitive
dysfunction, vaccinations, clinical tests, lipids, hypertension, anticoagulation and
antiplatelet therapy, antihyperglycemic therapy, hypoglycemia, nonalcoholic fatty
liver disease (NAFLD) and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), ASCVD, HF, CKD, and
comorbid HF and CKD, as well as a graphical summary of medications used for DCRM.
</p>
The effects of empagliflozin, an inhibitor of sodium-glucose cotransporter 2, in addition to standard care, on cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in patients with type 2 diabetes at high cardiovascular risk are not known.