GLPwatch

Effects of glycaemic management on diabetic kidney disease.

World J Diabetes · 2017

Last updated 2026-05-28

Research shows that better blood sugar control can slow the progression of kidney disease in people with diabetes, including reducing the risk of early kidney damage and possibly preventing kidney failure. Newer diabetes medications like empagliflozin, liraglutide, and semaglutide may also protect the kidneys beyond just lowering blood sugar, though the exact reasons are still being studied.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalWorld J Diabetes, 2017
Citations64
Relative citation ratio2.68
NIH percentile81
Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes, Chronic Kidney Disease

Abstract

Hyperglycaemia contributes to the onset and progression of diabetic kidney disease (DKD). Observational studies have not consistently demonstrated a glucose threshold, in terms of HbA1c levels, for the onset of DKD. Tight glucose control has clearly been shown to reduce the incidence of micro- or macroalbuminuria. However, evidence is now also emerging to suggest that intensive glucose control can slow glomerular filtration rate loss and possibly progression to end stage kidney disease. Achieving tight glucose control needs to be balanced against the increasing appreciation that glucose targets for the prevention of diabetes related complications need be individualised for each patient. Recently, empagliflozin which is an oral glucose lowering agent of the sodium glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitor class has been shown to have renal protective effects. However, the magnitude of empagliflozin's reno-protective properties are over and above that expected from its glucose lowering effects and most likely largely result from mechanisms involving alterations in intra-renal haemodynamics. Liraglutide and semaglutide, both injectable glucose lowering agents which are analogues of human glucagon like peptide-1 have also been shown to reduce progression to macroalbuminuria through mechanisms that remain to be fully elucidated. Here we review the evidence from observational and interventional studies that link good glucose control with improved renal outcomes. We also briefly review the potential reno-protective effects of newer glucose lowering agents.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 28572879 ↗