DOI: 10.1093/ehjopen/oeag109 ISSN: 2752-4191

Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists are associated with cardiac, cancer- and mortality-related benefits in diabetic patients treated with anthracyclines

Sunnia T Chen, Teodora Donisan, Bradley R Lewis, Vidur Kailash, Sandra Herrmann, Kathryn J Ruddy, David Yat Chung Cheung, Danielle Desautels, Davinder S Jassal, Joerg Herrmann

Abstract

Background

Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs) reduce major adverse cardiovascular events in diabetics. This study aimed to investigate the cardiac, cancer, and overall mortality effects of GLP-1RA in diabetics treated with anthracyclines.

Methods

We retrospectively identified 1,384 diabetics treated with anthracyclines from 2013 to 2023; 56 received GLP-1 RAs between their first and last dose of anthracycline. These patients were propensity score matched 4:1 to 224 controls without concurrent GLP-1 RA use. Because stage was not available for 10 of the 56 patients, a repeat analysis was conducted with additional matching for cancer stage in 46 cases and 92 controls. Major endpoints were rate of all-cause and cancer- and cardiovascular disease (CVD)-related mortality, no evidence of disease (NED), and hospitalization for CVD including heart failure (HF), over 5 years. Survival analyses were conducted using cause-specific hazards Cox regression.

Results

Patients on GLP-1 RAs had a significantly lower 5-year overall mortality (HR 0.46, CI 0.24-0.87, P = 0.007) and cancer-related mortality (HR 0.42, CI 0.19-0.91, P = 0.03). This mortality risk reduction remained significant even when accounting for covariates (HR 0.39, CI 0.20-0.75, P = 0.002). The percentage of patients with NED was higher in the GLP-1 RA than control group (60.9% vs. 38.0%, p = 0.007). A decline in LVEF was seen in controls but not in patients on GLP-1 RAs. There was no significant difference in CVD hospitalization; the rate of HF-related hospitalization was very low overall.

Conclusion

GLP-1 RAs may offer survival benefits and better cancer- and cardiac function-related outcomes in diabetics undergoing anthracycline chemotherapy.

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