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Cardiovascular outcomes of sodium-glucose Co-transporter 2 inhibitors use after myocardial infarction: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials

Abiodun Idowu, Olayinka Adebolu, Phuuwadith Wattanachayakul, Elvis Obomanu, Samir Shah, Kevin Bryan Lo, Gregg S. Pressman

2024Current Problems in Cardiology15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Patients who had acute myocardial infarction are at high risk of negative cardiac outcomes and previous SGLT2i landmark trials excluded these patients. It therefore remains unclear if SGLT2i is safe and confers beneficial cardiovascular outcomes after acute myocardial infarction. METHODS: We systematically reviewed randomized controlled trials that evaluated the outcomes of adding SGLT2i to conventional post-myocardial infarction care. Random-effects model meta-analysis via RevMan 5.4 was done on data extracted from pooled 11,204 patients. RESULTS: SGLT2i use after acute myocardial infarction was significantly associated with reduced heart failure hospitalization (OR: 0.77, 95%CI: 0.62-0.96, p=0.02), but was not associated with a reduction in all-cause mortality (OR: 1.05, 95%CI: 0.77-1.43, p=0.75), cardiac-related death (OR: 1.04, 95%CI: 0.83-1.30, p=0.76), or major adverse cardiac events (OR: 0.90, 95%CI: 0.77-1.05, p=0.18). CONCLUSION: SGLT2 inhibitor therapy after acute myocardial infarction is safe and is associated with a reduced risk of heart failure hospitalization, but not with all-cause mortality.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineMeta-analysisMyocardial infarctionRandomized controlled trialInternal medicineTransporterMEDLINECardiologyIntensive care medicinePolitical scienceBiochemistryChemistryLawGeneDiabetes Treatment and ManagementHyperglycemia and glycemic control in critically ill and hospitalized patientsHeart Failure Treatment and Management