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The Vertis CV Trial

The VERTIS CV Trial evaluated the cardiovascular outcomes of ertugliflozin treatment in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. The trial involved over 8,000 patients across many countries. It assessed whether treatment with ertugliflozin reduced the risk of major adverse cardiovascular events in this high-risk population compared to placebo when added to standard care. The results of this trial could provide important information about the cardiovascular safety and efficacy of ertugliflozin.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
107 views96 pages

The Vertis CV Trial

The VERTIS CV Trial evaluated the cardiovascular outcomes of ertugliflozin treatment in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. The trial involved over 8,000 patients across many countries. It assessed whether treatment with ertugliflozin reduced the risk of major adverse cardiovascular events in this high-risk population compared to placebo when added to standard care. The results of this trial could provide important information about the cardiovascular safety and efficacy of ertugliflozin.

Uploaded by

magrea
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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The VERTIS CV Trial

Cardiovascular Outcomes Following Ertugliflozin


Treatment in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus
and Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease

VERTIS
eValuation of ERTugliflozin effIcacy and Safety
Our faculty

Richard E. Pratley, Sam Dagogo-Jack, Christopher P. Cannon, Darren K. McGuire, David Z.I. Cherney,
MD MD, DSc MD MD, MHSc MD, PhD
AdventHealth Translational University of Tennessee Brigham and Women’s University of Texas University of Toronto,
Research Institute, Health Science Center, Hospital, Harvard Medical Southwestern Medical Toronto, Ontario,
Orlando, FL, USA Memphis, TN, USA School, Boston, MA, USA Center, Dallas, TX, USA Canada

2
Presentation outline:

• Introduction, Study Rationale and Design


Richard E. Pratley, MD
Orlando, FL
• Baseline Characteristics and Metabolic Results
Sam Dagogo-Jack, MD, DSc
Memphis, TN
• Cardiovascular and Renal Outcomes
Christopher P. Cannon, MD
Boston, MA
• Safety and Updated CV Meta-Analysis
Darren K. McGuire, MD, MHSc
Dallas, TX
• Overall Conclusions
David Z.I. Cherney, MD, PhD
Toronto, ON

3
Introduction, Study Rationale
and Design
Richard E. Pratley, MD
AdventHealth Translational Research Institute,
Orlando, Florida

VERTIS
eValuation of ERTugliflozin effIcacy and Safety
Support

• The VERTIS CV study was funded by Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp.,
a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc., Kenilworth, NJ, USA in
collaboration with Pfizer Inc, New York, NY, USA.

5
Presenter disclosure

• Richard Pratley reports the following:


– Research grants, consulting and/or speakers fees from Hanmi
Pharmaceutical Co., Janssen, Merck & Co., Inc., Novo Nordisk, Pfizer
Inc, Poxel SA, Sanofi, Scohia Pharma Inc. and Sun Pharmaceutical
Industries.
– All fees for services were paid directly to AdventHealth, a non-profit
organization.

6
ADA Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes - 2020

American Diabetes Association. Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes—2020. Diabetes Care.


202;43(Suppl 1):S98-S110. 7
ADA Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes - 2020

American Diabetes Association. Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes—2020. Diabetes Care.


202;43(Suppl 1):S98-S110. 8
SGLT2 inhibition reduces renal glucose reabsorption
Collecting
duct
Glomerulus
Proximal
tubule Distal
tubule
S1
Glucose
filtration
S3
SGLT2 SGLT1

Glucose 90%
reabsorption 10%
Increased
SGLT2 glucose
inhibitor excretion
Loop of Henle
–70 to 80 g/day
(–280 to 320 kcal/day)
SGLT1, sodium-glucose cotransporter 1; SGLT2, sodium-glucose cotransporter 2.
Wright EM. Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 2001;280:F10-F18. Lee YJ et al. Kidney Int Suppl 2007;106:S27-S35.
Han S et al. Diabetes 2008;57:1723-1729. Inzucchi SE et al. Diabetes Care 2015;38:140-149.
Ertugliflozin is a selective SGLT2 inhibitor
Selectivity for SGLT2 : SGLT1
4096
2235-fold 2500-fold
2048
1200-fold
1024
In vitro potency/selectivity of 512
ertugliflozin 256 200-fold

• >2000-fold selectivity for SGLT2 compared 128

with SGLT1 64

‒ IC50 for SGLT2 = 0.9 nmol/L 32


20-fold
16
‒ IC50 for SGLT1 = 1960 nmol/L
8
4
2
1

SGLT1, sodium-glucose cotransporter 1; SGLT2, sodium-glucose cotransporter 2.


Mascitti V et al. J Med Chem 2011;54:2952-2960.
VERTIS Phase 3 clinical trial program

9 trials in ~13,000 patients in >40 countries

Add-on to Dual
Diet and Exercise Metformin Add-on Special Populations
Combination

VERTIS MONO VERTIS SU VERTIS SITA2 VERTIS RENAL


Ertu vs Pbo Ertu vs Glim Ertu vs Pbo added to Met + Sita Ertu vs Pbo in pts with CKD
n=461 n=1326 n=464 n=468

VERTIS SITA VERTIS FACTORIAL VERTIS CV


Ertu/Sita vs Pbo Ertu +/– Sita Ertu vs Pbo in pts with ASCVD
n=291 n=1233 n=8246

VERTIS MET
Ertu vs Pbo added to Met
n=621
Ertugliflozin 5 mg and 15 mg
VERTIS ASIA
Ertu vs Pbo added to Met
were studied
n=506

ASCVD, atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease; CKD, chronic kidney disease; CV, cardiovascular;
Ertu, ertugliflozin; Glim, glimepiride; Met, metformin; MONO, monotherapy; Pbo, placebo; pts, patients; 11
SITA, sitagliptin; SU, sulfonylurea; VERTIS, eValuation of ERTugliflozin effIcacy and Safety.
Ertugliflozin: mean HbA1c reductions of 0.8–1.2%
Monotherapy and add-on studies Coadministration studies
VERTIS MONO1 VERTIS MET2 VERTIS SU3 VERTIS SITA24 VERTIS VERTIS SITA6
Ertugliflozin Ertugliflozin Ertugliflozin Ertugliflozin FACTORIAL5 Ertugliflozin
monotherapy added on to vs added on to Ertugliflozin plus
metformin glimepiride metformin and plus sitagliptin sitagliptin
Mean baseline sitagliptin factorial
HbA1c (%): 8.2 8.1 7.8 8.0 8.6 8.9
0.5
LS mean (95% CI) change in
HbA1c (%) from baseline*

0.0

–-0.5

–-1.0

–-1.5 Placebo/glimepiride/sitagliptin Ertugliflozin 5 mg


Ertugliflozin 15 mg Ertugliflozin 5 mg + sitagliptin 100 mg
–-2.0 Ertugliflozin 15 mg + sitagliptin 100 mg

–-2.5
*Change from baseline at Week 26 except for VERTIS SU (Week 52).
1. Terra SG et al. Diabetes Obes Metab 2017;19:721-728. 2. Rosenstock J et al. Diabetes Obes Metab 2018;20:520-529. 3. Hollander S et al. Diabetes Ther 2018;9:193-207.
4. Dagogo-Jack S et al. Diabetes Obes Metab 2018;20:530-540. 5 Pratley RE et al. Diabetes Obes Metab 2018;20:1111-1120. 6. Miller S et al. Diabetes Ther 2018;9:253-268. 12
CI, confidence interval; HbA1c, glycated hemoglobin; LS, least squares.
Ertugliflozin: mean body weight reductions of ~3kg
Monotherapy and add-on studies Coadministration studies
VERTIS MONO1 VERTIS MET2 VERTIS SU3 VERTIS SITA24 VERTIS VERTIS SITA6
Ertugliflozin Ertugliflozin Ertugliflozin Ertugliflozin FACTORIAL5 Ertugliflozin
monotherapy added on to vs added on to Ertugliflozin plus
metformin glimepiride metformin and plus sitagliptin sitagliptin
Mean baseline body sitagliptin factorial
weight (kg): 93.0 84.9 86.8 86.9 88.7 92.3
2
body weight (kg) from baseline*
LS mean (95% CI) change in

–-2

–-4
Placebo/glimepiride/sitagliptin Ertugliflozin 5 mg
–-6 Ertugliflozin 15 mg Ertugliflozin 5 mg + sitagliptin 100 mg
Ertugliflozin 15 mg + sitagliptin 100 mg
–-8
*Change from baseline at Week 26 except for VERTIS SU (Week 52).
1. Terra SG et al. Diabetes Obes Metab 2017;19:721-728. 2. Rosenstock J et al. Diabetes Obes Metab 2018;20:520-529. 3. Hollander S et al. Diabetes Ther 2018;9:193-207.
4. Dagogo-Jack S et al. Diabetes Obes Metab 2018;20:530-540. 5 Pratley RE et al. Diabetes Obes Metab 2018;20:1111-1120. 6. Miller S et al. Diabetes Ther 2018;9:253-268. 13
CI, confidence interval; HbA1c, glycated hemoglobin; LS, least squares.
Ertugliflozin: mean SBP reductions of ~4-6 mmHg
Monotherapy and add-on studies Coadministration studies
VERTIS MONO1 VERTIS MET2 VERTIS SU3 VERTIS SITA24 VERTIS VERTIS SITA6
Ertugliflozin Ertugliflozin Ertugliflozin Ertugliflozin FACTORIAL5 Ertugliflozin
monotherapy added on to vs added on to Ertugliflozin plus
metformin glimepiride metformin and plus sitagliptin sitagliptin
Mean baseline sitagliptin factorial
SBP (mmHg): 130.0 130.0 130.3 131.3 129.3 129.1
5
LS mean (95% CI) change in
SBP (mmHg) from baseline*

–-5

Placebo/glimepiride/sitagliptin Ertugliflozin 5 mg
–-10 Ertugliflozin 15 mg Ertugliflozin 5 mg + sitagliptin 100 mg
Ertugliflozin 15 mg + sitagliptin 100 mg
–-15
*Change from baseline at Week 26 except for VERTIS SU (Week 52).
1. Terra SG et al. Diabetes Obes Metab 2017;19:721-728. 2. Rosenstock J et al. Diabetes Obes Metab 2018;20:520-529. 3. Hollander S et al. Diabetes Ther 2018;9:193-207.
4. Dagogo-Jack S et al. Diabetes Obes Metab 2018;20:530-540. 5 Pratley RE et al. Diabetes Obes Metab 2018;20:1111-1120. 6. Miller S et al. Diabetes Ther 2018;9:253-268. 14
CI, confidence interval; HbA1c, glycated hemoglobin; LS, least squares.
Ertugliflozin: transient, reversible decrease in eGFR, consistent with class

2
LS mean (95% CI) change in
eGFR (mL/min/1.73 m2)

–-1

–-2

–-3
Non-ertugliflozin Ertugliflozin 5 mg Ertugliflozin 15 mg
–-4
Baseline eGFR (mL/min/1.73 m2) 88.2 88.5 88.0
–-5

–-6
0 6 12 18 26 39 52 65 78 91 104
Week
Pooled analysis of two randomized controlled, active comparator studies: VERTIS SU and VERTIS MET. In the VERTIS SU study, ertugliflozin
was evaluated vs glimepiride over 104 weeks. In the VERTIS MET study, ertugliflozin was evaluated vs placebo over 26 weeks.
Non-ertugliflozin refers to placebo or glimepiride. 15
eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate; LS, least squares.
Cherney D et al. Diabetologia 2020; doi: 10.1007/s00125-020-05133-4.
Study Design
and Methodology

VERTIS
eValuation of ERTugliflozin effIcacy and Safety
Timelines of SGLT2 inhibitor CV outcome trials designed to fulfill
2008 FDA regulatory guidance
2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 2020 2022

EMPA-REG OUTCOME

CANVAS Program

DECLARE TIMI 58

VERTIS CV
Dec 2013-Dec 2019

First patient March 2016: Protocol Amendment Last patient


visit • Doubled sample size to ~8000 visit
• Added efficacy objectives for
superiority of CV/renal outcomes

CV, cardiovascular; FDA, Food and Drug Administration; SGLT2, sodium-glucose cotransporter 2. 17
VERTIS CV: global study assessing long-term effects of ertugliflozin

Sweden Lithuania Russia

VERTIS CV
Latvia Slovakia
Canada Poland Hungary
Netherlands Ukraine South Korea
EVALUATION OF US UK Romania

ERTUGLIFLOZIN Czech Republic Georgia Taiwan

EFFICACY AND SAFETY Italy


Bosnia
Bulgaria
Hong Kong
CARDIOVASCULAR Mexico
Croatia Greece Turkey

OUTCOMES TRIAL Israel Thailand Philippines


Colombia Serbia

8246 randomized patients with Australia


Type 2 diabetes and ASCVD from 531
enrolling centers across 34 countries Argentina South Africa
New Zealand

ASCVD, atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease; CV, cardiovascular.


Cannon CP et al. Am Heart J 2018;206:11–23. 18
VERTIS CV committees
Cardiovascular Pancreatitis
Adjudication Adjudication
• Blair O’Neill (Chair) • Martin Poleski (Chair)
• Cecilia Bahit • Ziad Gellad
• Sherryn Roth • Jorge Obando (until
Scientific Advisory Data Monitoring • Joseph Schindler Feb 2019)

Committee Committee •

Isaac Silverman
Philippe Gabriel Steg
• Keyur Patel
• Darshan Kothari (from

• Christopher Cannon • William Herman (Chair) • Tanya Turan


Mar 2019)

• James Udelson
• Bernard Charbonnel • Gary Cutler Hepatic
Adjudication
Renal
• David Cherney • Peter McCullough Adjudication
• Mark Russo (Chair)
• Karin Anderson
• Francesco Cosentino • Mark Molitch • David Charytan
(Chair)
• Frederic Gordon

• Sam Dagogo-Jack • Giles Montelescot • John Forman




Amir Qamar
Andrew Stolz
• Emily Robinson
• Darren McGuire (until 2018) • Sushrut Waikar
Fracture
• Richard Pratley • Michael Zile • Daniel Weiner
Adjudication
• Weichung Shih (from Oct 2018) • Thomas Link (Chair)
• Andrew Haims
• Joel Newman
Study design

Multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, event-driven trial

Randomization 1:1:1

Placebo Ertugliflozin 5 mg Ertugliflozin 15 mg

Primary endpoint (non-inferiority):


• Composite outcome of MACE (CV death, nonfatal MI, nonfatal stroke)

Secondary endpoints (superiority): Other prespecified endpoints:


• Composite outcome of CV death/HHF • Individual components of • Fatal or nonfatal MI
• CV death MACE • Fatal or nonfatal stroke
• Renal composite (renal death, • Composite of MACE-plus • HHF
dialysis/transplant, doubling of serum (MACE plus hospitalization • All-cause mortality
creatinine) for unstable angina)

CV, cardiovascular; HHF, hospitalization for heart failure; MACE, major adverse cardiovascular events; MI, myocardial infarction.
Cannon CP et al. Am Heart J 2018;206:11-23. 20
Statistical analyses

• Primary and secondary time-to-first event outcomes analyzed by Cox


proportional hazards model
‒ Pooled ertugliflozin dose groups vs placebo
• Noninferiority margin of 1.3 on the HR for MACE, as per regulatory guidance
• Hierarchical testing sequence across primary and key secondary superiority
outcomes
• Non-inferiority analysis of MACE: analyzed by FAS
– Includes all patients who were randomized and received at least 1 dose and included
confirmed events occurring up to 365 days after the last confirmed dose for those with
premature discontinuation
• Superiority analyses of secondary CV and renal outcomes: analyzed by ITT
– Includes all randomized patients and all confirmed events with no upper limit on the event
ascertainment window

CV, cardiovascular; FAS, full analysis set; HR, hazard ratio; ITT, intention-to-treat; MACE, major adverse cardiovascular events.
Cannon CP et al. Am Heart J 2018;206:11-23. 21
Study population

Selected inclusion criteria Selected exclusion criteria

• Aged ≥40 years • History of T1DM or ketoacidosis


• T2DM diagnosis according to ADA guidelines – • Experiencing a CV event (e.g., myocardial
HbA1c 7.0%–10.5% (53–91 mmol/mol) infarction or stroke) or undergoing coronary or
• Established ASCVD involving the coronary, peripheral intervention procedure between the
cerebrovascular, and/or peripheral arterial screening visit and randomization
systems • Undergoing any CV surgery (e.g., valvular
• Stable on allowable AHA or on no background surgery) within 3 months of the screening visit
AHA for ≥8 weeks prior to study participation • Planned revascularization or peripheral
intervention procedure or other CV surgery
• eGFR <30 mL/min/1.73 m2 at the screening visit
• NYHA Class IV heart failure at screening visit
(Class III–IV prior to protocol amendment)

ADA, American Diabetes Association; AHA, antihyperglycemic agents; ASCVD, atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease; CV, cardiovascular;
eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate; HbA1c, glycated hemoglobin; NYHA, New York Heart Association; T1DM, type 1 diabetes mellitus; 22
T2DM, type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Cannon CP et al. Am Heart J 2018;206:11-23.
Treatment protocol

• Once-daily treatment of study medication added to background standard of care*, which


was held stable during the first 18 weeks of the study†
Double-blind treatment period

Placebo (n = 2747)

Screening Ertugliflozin 5 mg (n = 2752)

Ertugliflozin 15 mg (n = 2747)

Clinic visits V1 V2 V3 V4 V5 V6 V7 V8 V9 V10 V11

Day 1 6 12 18 26 39 52 16 20 24
Follow-up call
14 days after
Randomization Weeks Months
last dose
1st dose study
drug
*Excluding SGLT2 inhibitors, rosiglitazone, and chlorpropamide
†Except for patients meeting the glycemic rescue criteria or with clinically significant hypoglycemia. 23
V, visit.
Patient disposition
Assessed for eligibility
Excluded n=6355
N=14,607 Did not meet eligibility criteria
n=6350
Randomized Other n=5
n=8252
6 patients were multiply
enrolled and excluded
Randomized and included in
ITT population
n=8246*

Placebo Ertugliflozin 5 mg Ertugliflozin 15 mg


n=2747 n=2752 n=2747

87.0% Completed study 88.0% Completed study 87.4% Completed study


4.0% Discontinued prematurely 3.7% Discontinued prematurely 4.1% Discontinued prematurely
from the study from the study from the study
9.3% Died 8.5% Died 8.7% Died
99.4% Had vital status available 99.2% Had vital status available 99.3% Had vital status available

*8246 patients were randomized and constitute the ITT population for superiority testing;

8238 patients received at least one dose of investigational product and constitute the FAS for the non-inferiority analysis. 24
FAS, full analysis set; ITT, intention-to-treat.
Study medication disposition and overall exposure

Placebo Ertugliflozin
(n=2747) (n=5499)
Completed the study medication 1850 (67.4) 3945 (71.7)
Died on study medication 130 (4.7) 263 (4.8)
Premature discontinuation of the study medication 767 (27.9) 1291 (23.5)
Reasons for premature discontinuation of the study medication (≥2% of patients in any group)
Withdrawal by patient 422 (15.4) 673 (12.2)
Adverse event 184 (6.7) 403 (7.3)
Physician decision 54 (2.0) 66 (1.2)
Mean treatment exposure, years 2.8 ± 1.4 2.9 ± 1.4
Mean duration of follow-up, years 3.5 ± 1.1 3.5 ± 1.2

25
Summary: study design and methodology

• VERTIS CV is the latest SGLT2 inhibitor trial conducted to fulfill the


2008 regulatory guidance on new diabetes medications

• VERTIS CV: prospective, multicenter, randomized, double-blind,


placebo-controlled, parallel-group, event-driven trial in patients with
type 2 diabetes and established atherosclerotic CV disease
– 8246 patients were randomly assigned to receive ertugliflozin or placebo (ITT)
– 8238 patients received ≥1 dose of study medication (FAS)
– Mean duration of follow-up in study overall was 3.5 years
– Rates of discontinuation from the study were low
– Final vital status was available for >99% of patients

CV, cardiovascular; FAS, full analysis set; ITT, intention-to-treat; SGLT2, sodium-glucose cotransporter 2. 26
Baseline Characteristics and
Metabolic Results
Sam Dagogo-Jack, MD, DSc
University of Tennessee Health Science Center,
Memphis, TN

VERTIS
eValuation of ERTugliflozin effIcacy and Safety
Presenter disclosure

• Sam Dagogo-Jack has led clinical trials for AstraZeneca, Boehringer


Ingelheim, and Novo Nordisk, Inc., has received consulting fees from
AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Janssen, Merck & Co., Inc., and
Sanofi, and has equity interests in Jana Care, Inc. and Aerami
Therapeutics.

28
Baseline characteristics

Placebo Ertugliflozin
(n=2747) (n=5499)
Age, years ± SD 64.4 ± 8.0 64.4 ± 8.1
Male, n (%) 1903 (69.3) 3866 (70.3)
Race, n (%)
White 2414 (87.9) 4826 (87.8)
Black 69 (2.5) 166 (3.0)
Asian 162 (5.9) 336 (6.1)
Other 102 (3.7) 171 (3.1)
Ethnicity, n (%)
Hispanic 343 (12.5) 700 (12.7)
Non-Hispanic 2399 (87.3) 4782 (87.0)
Region, n (%)
North America 605 (22.0) 1208 (22.0)
South America 239 (8.7) 484 (8.8)
Europe 1546 (56.3) 3091 (56.2)
Asia 173 (6.3) 350 (6.4)
South Africa 126 (4.6) 251 (4.6)
Australia/New Zealand 58 (2.1) 115 (2.1)
29
SD, standard deviation.
Baseline characteristics

Placebo Ertugliflozin
(n=2747) (n=5499)
Duration of T2DM, years 13.1 ± 8.4 12.9 ± 8.3
HbA1c, % 8.2 ± 0.9 8.2 ± 1.0
BMI, kg/m2 32.0 ± 5.5 31.9 ± 5.4
Total cholesterol, mg/dL 168.3 ± 45.5 168.9 ± 46.9
LDL cholesterol, mg/dL 88.8 ± 37.7 89.3 ± 38.5
HDL cholesterol, mg/dL 43.9 ± 12.3 43.7 ± 12.0
Triglycerides, mg/dL 178.9 ± 104.7 181.4 ± 119.2
SBP, mmHg 133.1 ± 13.9 133.5 ± 13.7
DBP, mmHg 76.4 ± 8.7 76.8 ± 8.3
eGFR, mL/min/1.73 m2 75.7 ± 20.8 76.1 ± 20.9
eGFR <60 mL/min/1.73 m2, n (%) 608 (22.1) 1199 (21.8)
Values are means ± SD
BMI, body mass index; DBP, diastolic blood pressure; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate; HbA1c, glycated hemoglobin; 30
HDL, high-density lipoprotein; LDL, low-density lipoprotein; SBP, systolic blood pressure; SD, standard deviation.
Baseline characteristics: history of CV disease

100
Placebo Ertugliflozin
80 76.9 75.4

58.7 57.8
Patients (%)

60
48.4 47.7

40
24.5 23.4 22.3 23.2
18.6 18.7 20.3 21.5
20

0
CAD MI Coronary HF PAD Cerebrovascular Stroke
revascularization disease

CAD, coronary artery disease; CV, cardiovascular; HF, heart failure; MI, myocardial infarction;
PAD, peripheral arterial disease. 31
Baseline characteristics: background antihyperglycemic medications

100

Placebo Ertugliflozin
80 77.3 75.8

~Two-thirds of all randomized


Patients (%)

60 patients were on ≥2
48.9
46.5 antihyperglycemic agents
40.8 41.2 at their screening visit
40

20
10.6 11.3
3.1 3.5
0
Metformin Insulin Sulfonylurea DPP-4 inhibitor GLP-1 receptor agonist

Medications are not mutually exclusive.


DPP-4, dipeptidyl peptidase-4; GLP-1, glucagon-like peptide-1. 32
Baseline characteristics: background CV medications

100
Placebo Ertugliflozin 84.9 84.5
81.5 80.9 81.6 81.9
80
69.3 68.9
Patients (%)

60
43.5 42.7
40 34.6 33.6

20 15.5 15.0
8.2 8.2
4.2 3.2
0
RAAS Beta- Calcium Diuretic Diuretic MRA Platelet Statin Ezetimibe
blocker blocker channel (any) (loop) aggregation
blocker inhibitor

Medications are not mutually exclusive.


CV, cardiovascular; MRA, mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist; RAAS, renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system. 33
Metabolic Outcomes

VERTIS
eValuation of ERTugliflozin effIcacy and Safety
HbA1c over time

0.2 Placebo Ertugliflozin 5 mg Ertugliflozin 15 mg


LS mean change (95% CI) in

0.0

–-0.2
HbA1c (%)

–-0.4

–-0.6

Difference in LS mean (95% CI) at Week 18:


–-0.8 Ertugliflozin 5 mg: –0.5% (–0.5, –0.4); P<0.001
Ertugliflozin 15 mg: –0.5% (–0.6, –0.5); P<0.001
–-1.0
0 6 12 18 26 39 52 69 86 103 120 137 154 171 189 206
Weeks

Doses of background antihyperglycemic medication were held constant for the initial 18 weeks of the study
except for those patients meeting the glycemic rescue criteria or with clinically significant hypoglycemia. 35
CI, confidence interval; HbA1c, glycated hemoglobin; LS, least squares.
Body weight over time

1 Placebo Ertugliflozin 5 mg Ertugliflozin 15 mg


LS mean change (95% CI) in

0
body weight (kg)

–-1

–-2

–-3
Mean decrease (SD) in body weight
at Week 52:
–-4 Ertugliflozin 5 mg: 2.4 kg (±3.9)
Ertugliflozin 15 mg: 2.8 kg (±4.0)
Placebo: 0.4 kg (±3.6)
–-5
0 6 12 18 26 39 52 69 86 103 120 137 154 171 189 206
Weeks

CI, confidence interval; LS, least squares; SD, standard deviation. 36


SBP over time

2 Placebo Ertugliflozin 5 mg Ertugliflozin 15 mg


LS mean change (95% CI) in

0
SBP (mmHg)

–-2

–-4

–-6 Difference in LS mean (95% CI) at Week 52:


Ertugliflozin 5 mg: –2.6 mmHg (–3.3, –1.9); P<0.001
Ertugliflozin 15 mg: –3.2 mmHg (–3.9, –2.5); P<0.001
–-8
0 6 12 18 26 39 52 69 86 103 120 137 154 171 189 206
Weeks

CI, confidence interval; LS, least squares; SBP, systolic blood pressure. 37
Summary: baseline characteristics and metabolic results

• Baseline characteristics were well-balanced between


treatment groups

• Patients were generally well treated with guideline-directed


secondary prevention medications

• Ertugliflozin reduced HbA1c, body weight, and SBP compared


with placebo and reductions were sustained over the course
of the study

HbA1c, glycated hemoglobin; SBP, systolic blood pressure. 38


Cardiovascular and Renal
Outcomes
Christopher Cannon, MD
Cardiovascular Division, Brigham and Women’s
Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA

VERTIS
eValuation of ERTugliflozin effIcacy and Safety
Presenter disclosure

• Christopher Cannon has received research grants from Amgen,


Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Daiichi Sankyo,
Janssen, Merck & Co., Inc., Pfizer Inc, as well as fees from Aegerion,
Alnylam, Amarin, Amgen, Applied Therapeutics, Ascendia,
Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Corvidia, HLS
Therapeutics, Innovent, Janssen, Kowa, Merck & Co., Inc., Pfizer
Inc, Sanofi.

40
Primary outcome: MACE*
CV death, nonfatal MI, or nonfatal stroke

20
11.9% (ertugliflozin) vs 11.9% (placebo)
HR, 0.97 (95.6% CI, 0.85, 1.11)
P<0.001 for non-inferiority
Patients with event (%)

15
Placebo

10
Ertugliflozin

0
0 6 12 24 36 48 60
No. at risk
Placebo 2745 2663 2580 2180
Month 1027 769 134
All Ertugliflozin 5493 5346 5203 4448 2216 1690 272
*Full analysis set included all randomized patients who received at least one dose of study medication (N=5493 for ertugliflozin and N=2745 for placebo).
Only confirmed MACE events occurring up to 365 days after the last confirmed dose of study medication were included in the primary analysis. 41
CI, confidence interval; CV, cardiovascular; HR, hazard ratio; MACE, major adverse cardiovascular events; MI, myocardial infarction.
Primary outcome: MACE*
CV death, nonfatal MI, or nonfatal stroke
Placebo Ertugliflozin 5 mg Ertugliflozin 15 mg
20
Ertugliflozin 5 mg Ertugliflozin 15 mg
HR 0.91 HR 1.04
(95.6% CI, 0.77, 1.07) (95.6% CI, 0.89, 1.21)
Patients with event (%)

15

10

0
No. at risk
0 6 12 24 36 48 60
Placebo 2745 2663 2580 2180 Month 1027 769 134
Ertugliflozin 5 mg 2746 2670 2610 2247 1117 855 140
Ertugliflozin 15 mg 2747 2676 2593 2201 1099 835 132
*Full analysis set included all randomized patients who received at least one dose of study medication (N=2746 for ertugliflozin 5 mg, N=2747 for ertugliflozin 15 mg, and
N=2745 for placebo). Only confirmed MACE events occurring up to 365 days after the last confirmed dose of study medication were included in the primary analysis.
42
CI, confidence interval; CV, cardiovascular; HR, hazard ratio; MACE, major adverse cardiovascular even; MI, myocardial infarction.
MACE and individual endpoints
CV death, nonfatal MI, or nonfatal stroke

Ertugliflozin Placebo
n=5499 n=2747
HR P Value
Rate/100 patient-years (95% CI)

MACE* 3.9 4.0 0.97 (0.85, 1.11)‡ <0.001 (for


non-inferiority)

CV death† 1.8 1.9 0.92 (0.77, 1.11)§ 0.39

Nonfatal MI† 1.7 1.6 1.0 (0.86, 1. 27) 0.66

Nonfatal stroke† 0.8 0.8 1.0 (0.76, 1.32) 0.99

0.5 1 2
Favors Ertugliflozin Favors Placebo
*Full analysis set included all randomized patients who received at least one dose of study medication (N=5493 for ertugliflozin and N=2745 for placebo). Only confirmed MACE
events occurring up to 365 days after the last confirmed dose of study medication were included in the primary analysis. †Intention-to-treat analysis set that included all
randomized patients with no upper limit on the ascertainment window for the superiority outcomes (N=5499 for ertugliflozin and N=2747 for placebo). ‡95.6% CI; §95.8% CI. 43
CI, confidence interval; CV, cardiovascular; HR, hazard ratio; MACE, major adverse cardiovascular events; MI, myocardial infarction.
MACE: subgroup analysis (patient demographics)*

*Full analysis set included all randomized patients who received at least one dose of study medication (N=5493 for ertugliflozin and N=2745 for placebo).
Only confirmed MACE events occurring up to 365 days after the last confirmed dose of study medication were included in the primary analysis. †95.6% CI. 44
BMI, body mass index; CI, confidence interval; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate; HbA1c, glycated hemoglobin; HF, heart failure; HR, hazard
ratio;MACE, major adverse cardiovascular event.
MACE: subgroup analysis (concomitant medication)*

*Full
analysis set included all randomized patients who received at least one dose of study medication (N=5493 for ertugliflozin and N=2745 for placebo).
Only confirmed MACE events occurring up to 365 days after the last confirmed dose of study medication were included in the primary analysis; †95.6% CI. 45
ASA, acetylsalicylic acid; CI, confidence interval; DPP-4, dipeptidyl peptidase-4; GLP-1, glucagon-like peptide; HR, hazard ratio; RA, receptor agonist;
RAAS, renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system.
CV death or HHF*

15.0
8.1% (ertugliflozin) vs 9.1% (placebo)
12.5 HR, 0.88 (95.8% CI, 0.75, 1.03)
P=0.11 for superiority
Patients with event (%)

Placebo
10.0

7.5

5.0
Ertugliflozin

2.5

0.0
0 6 12 24 36 48 60
No. at risk Month
Placebo 2747 2702 2637 2536 1362 1120 219
All Ertugliflozin 5499 5399 5302 5126 2759 2289 402
*Intention-to-treat
analysis set that included all randomized patients with no upper limit on the ascertainment window for the superiority outcomes
(N=5499 for ertugliflozin and N=2747 for placebo).
CI (95.8%) for the alpha-protected tests was adjusted at the final analysis to account for the interim analysis as per the protocol. 46
CI, confidence interval; CV, cardiovascular; HHF, hospitalization for heart failure; HR, hazard ratio.
CV death or HHF: subgroup analysis (patient demographics)*

*Intention-to-treat analysis set that included all randomized patients with no upper limit on the ascertainment window for the superiority outcomes

(N=5499 for ertugliflozin and N=2747 for placebo). †95.8% CI. 47


BMI, body mass index; CI, confidence interval; CV, cardiovascular; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate; HbA1c, glycated hemoglobin;
HHF, hospitalization for heart failure; HF, heart failure; HR, hazard ratio.
CV death or HHF: subgroup analysis (concomitant medication)*

*Intention-to-treat
analysis set that included all randomized patients with no upper limit on the ascertainment window for the superiority outcomes
(N=5499 for ertugliflozin and N=2747 for placebo). †95.8% CI. 48
ASA, acetylsalicylic acid; HR, hazard ratio; DPP-4, dipeptidyl peptidase-4;
GLP-1, glucagon-like peptide; RA, receptor agonist; RAAS, renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system.
CV death*

15.0
6.2% (ertugliflozin) vs 6.7% (placebo)
HR, 0.92 (95.8% CI, 0.77, 1.11)
12.5 P=0.39
Patients with event (%)

10.0
Placebo

7.5

5.0

Ertugliflozin
2.5

0.0
0 6 12 24 36 48 60
No. at risk Month
Placebo 2747 2724 2684 2612 1423 1186 227
All Ertugliflozin 5499 5436 5374 5245 2866 2409 438
*Intention-to-treat
analysis set that included all randomized patients with no upper limit on the ascertainment window for the superiority outcomes
(N=5499 for ertugliflozin and N=2747 for placebo).
CI (95.8%) for the alpha-protected tests was adjusted at the final analysis to account for the interim analysis as per the protocol. 49
CI, confidence interval; CV, cardiovascular; HR, hazard ratio.
HHF*

5 2.5% (ertugliflozin) vs 3.6% (placebo)


HR, 0.70 (95% CI, 0.54, 0.90)
4 P=0.006
Patients with event (%)

Placebo
3

1 Ertugliflozin

0
0 6 12 24 36 48 60
No. at risk Month
Placebo 2747 2701 2635 2534 1361 1119 219
All Ertugliflozin 5499 5396 5297 5119 2766 2286 402
*Intention-to-treat
analysis set that included all randomized patients with no upper limit on the ascertainment window for the superiority outcomes
(N=5499 for ertugliflozin and N=2747 for placebo). 50
CI, confidence interval; HHF, hospitalization for heart failure; HR, hazard ratio.
Renal composite*
Renal death, dialysis/transplant, or doubling of serum creatinine

10
HR, 0.81 (95.8% CI, 0.63, 1.04)
P=0.08
8 Placebo Ertugliflozin
Patients with event (%)

n (%) n (%)
Renal composite 108 (3.9) 175 (3.2)
6 Renal death 0 (0.0) 0 (0.0) Placebo
Renal replacement
3 (0.1) 7 (0.1)
therapy
Doubling of serum
4 creatinine
105 (3.8) 168 (3.1)

2 Ertugliflozin

0
0 6 12 24 36 48 60
No. at risk
Placebo 2747 2703 2643
Month
2543 1371 1116 215
All Ertugliflozin 5499 5394 5299 5110 2756 2271 406
*Intention-to-treat
analysis set that included all randomized patients with no upper limit on the ascertainment window for the superiority outcomes
(N=5499 for ertugliflozin and N=2747 for placebo).
CI (95.8%) for the alpha-protected tests was adjusted at the final analysis to account for the interim analysis as per the protocol. 51
CI, confidence interval; HR, hazard ratio.
VERTIS CV: eGFR over time

2
Placebo Ertugliflozin 5 mg Ertugliflozin 15 mg
Mean change in eGFR from baseline

1
Baseline eGFR (mL/min/1.73 m2) 75.7 76.0 76.2
0
–-1
(mL/min/1.73 m2)

–-2
–-3
–-4
–-5 A lower degree of decline in eGFR over time, with a
difference in LS means relative to placebo at Month 60 of
–-6 3.01 mL/min/1.73m2 (1.63, 4.39) and 3.05 (1.67, 4.43),
respectively, for ertugliflozin 5 mg and ertugliflozin 15 mg
–-7 (p<0.001 for both comparisons).

–-8
0 3 6 12 16 20 24 30 36 42 48 52 60
Month

eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate. 52


Primary and secondary endpoints

Ertugliflozin Placebo HR (CI) P Value


n=5499 n=2747
Rate/100 patient-years

MACE* 3.9 4.0 0.97 (0.85, 1.11) <0.001 (for


non-inferiority)
CV Death/HHF† 2.3 2.7 0.88 (0.75, 1.03) 0.11

CV Death† 1.8 1.9 0.92 (0.77, 1.11) 0.39

HHF† 0.7 1.1 0.70 (0.54, 0.90) 0.006

Renal Composite† 0.9 1.2 0.81 (0.63, 1.04) 0.08

0.5 1 1.3 2

Favors Ertugliflozin Favors Placebo


*Full analysis set included all randomized patients who received at least one dose of study medication (N=5493 for ertugliflozin and N=2745 for placebo; 95.6% CI).
Only confirmed MACE events occurring up to 365 days after the last confirmed dose of study medication were included in the primary analysis.
†Intention-to-treat analysis set that included all randomized patients with no upper limit on the ascertainment window for the superiority outcomes

(N=5499 for ertugliflozin and N=2747 for placebo; 95.8% CI for CV death/HHF, CV death, and the renal composite outcome; 95% CI for HHF outcome). 53
CI, confidence interval; CV, cardiovascular; HHF, hospitalization for heart failure; HR, hazard ratio; MACE, major adverse cardiovascular events.
Summary: CV and renal outcomes

• In patients with type 2 diabetes and atherosclerotic CV disease, ertugliflozin


added to guideline-directed secondary prevention therapies was non-inferior
versus placebo for MACE

• The key secondary composite endpoint of CV death or HHF did not differ
between groups, nor did CV death, but a 30% lower risk of HHF was observed
with ertugliflozin

• The renal composite outcome was 19% lower, but was not statistically significant

• The overall pattern of the effects on endpoints of HHF and renal outcomes was
in line with those seen in other large trials of SGLT2 inhibitors

CV, cardiovascular; HHF, hospitalization for heart failure; MACE, major adverse cardiovascular events;
SGLT2, sodium-glucose cotransporter 2. 54
Safety and Updated CV
Meta-Analysis
Darren K. McGuire, MD, MHSc
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center,
Dallas, TX

VERTIS
eValuation of ERTugliflozin effIcacy and Safety
Presenter disclosure

• Darren K. McGuire has received honoraria for clinical trial leadership


from AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Eisai, Esperion,
GlaxoSmithKline, Janssen, Lexicon, Merck & Co., Inc., Novo
Nordisk, Sanofi Aventis, and has received consultancy fees from
Afimmune, Applied Therapeutics, AstraZeneca, Boehringer
Ingelheim, Lilly, Merck & Co., Inc., Pfizer Inc, Novo Nordisk,
Metavant, and Sanofi Aventis.

56
Safety

VERTIS
eValuation of ERTugliflozin effIcacy and Safety
Adverse events

Placebo Ertugliflozin 5 mg Ertugliflozin 15 mg


n (%) n (%) n (%)
(n=2745) (n=2746) (n=2747)
≥1 AEs 2349 (85.6) 2357 (85.8) 2325 (84.6)
≥1 AEs leading to permanent
188 (6.8) 207 (7.5) 201 (7.3)
study drug discontinuation
≥1 serious AEs 990 (36.1) 958 (34.9) 937 (34.1)

AEs, adverse events. 58


Selected adverse events

Placebo Ertugliflozin 5 mg Ertugliflozin 15 mg


n (%) n (%) n (%)
(n=2745) (n=2746) (n=2747)
Urinary tract infection 279 (10.2) 336 (12.2)* 330 (12.0)*
Genital mycotic infection (male) 22 (1.2) 86 (4.4)† 98 (5.1)†
Genital mycotic infection (female) 20 (2.4) 48 (6.0)† 65 (7.8)†
Symptomatic hypoglycemia 790 (28.8) 768 (28.0) 728 (26.5)
Hypovolemia-related 106 (3.9) 118 (4.3) 118 (4.3)
Pancreatitis (adjudicated)
Acute 10 (0.4) 12 (0.4) 5 (0.2)
Chronic 5 (0.2) 1 (<0.1) 2 (0.1)

*P<0.05 for the comparison with placebo.


†P<0.001 for the comparison with placebo. 59
Safety events of special interest

Placebo Ertugliflozin 5 mg Ertugliflozin 15 mg


n (%) n (%) n (%)
(n=2745) (n=2746) (n=2747)
Acute kidney injury* 60 (2.2) 48 (1.7) 53 (1.9)

Amputation 45 (1.6) 54 (2.0) 57 (2.1)

Diabetic ketoacidosis (adjudicated) 2 (0.1) 7 (0.3) 12 (0.4)

Fracture (adjudicated) 98 (3.6) 99 (3.6) 102 (3.7)

Fournier’s gangrene 0 (0.0) 0 (0.0) 0 (0.0)

• Rates of amputations were 0.5 and 0.6 per 100 patient-years for placebo and ertugliflozin,
respectively (risk difference, 0.1; 95% CI [–0.1, 0.3])

*Incidence of acute kidney injury was assessed using the Acute Renal Failure, narrow standard MedDRA query and a sponsor
prespecified eGFR and creatinine change custom MedDRA query with potential cases adjudicated by an external committee.
CI, confidence interval. 60
Summary and conclusion: safety

• Ertugliflozin was generally safe and well tolerated with a safety


profile consistent with known risks of the SGLT2 inhibitor class:
– Urinary tract infection and genital mycotic infection: frequency significantly
higher with ertugliflozin versus placebo
– Acute kidney injury: frequency did not differ with ertugliflozin versus placebo
– Diabetic ketoacidosis: frequency low, numerically higher with ertugliflozin
versus placebo
– Amputation: frequency low, numerically higher with ertugliflozin
versus placebo

SGLT2, sodium-glucose cotransporter 2. 61


SGLT2 Inhibitors, Cardiovascular
and Renal Outcomes in Patients
with Type 2 Diabetes
Systematic Review and Meta-analysis

VERTIS
eValuation of ERTugliflozin effIcacy and Safety
Background

• SGLT2 inhibitors favorably affect a spectrum of CV and renal outcomes,


with such efficacy largely independent of glycemic control1-4

• Accordingly, professional endocrinology and cardiology society


recommendations and guidelines endorse the use of SGLT2 inhibitors to:5-10
‒ Reduce risk for MI, stroke, and CV death in patients with T2DM with prevalent
ASCVD and /or albuminuric CKD
‒ Reduce risk for incident hospitalization for HF in patients with T2DM with
prevalent or multiple risk factors for ASCVD and/or albuminuric CKD
‒ Mitigate risk of kidney disease incidence and progression in those with or at
high risk for CKD

1. Zinman B et al. N Engl J Med 2015;373:2117-2128. 2. Neal B et al. N Engl J Med 2017;377:644-657. 3. Wiviott SD et al. N Engl J Med 2019;380:347-357.
4. Perkovic V et al. N Engl J Med 2019. 380:2295-2306; 5. Davies MJ et al. Diabetes Care 2018;41:2669-2701. 6. ADA. Diabetes Care 2020;43(Suppl1):S98-S110.
7. Das SR et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 2018;72:3200-3223. 8. Arnett DK et al. Circulation 2019;140:e596-e646. 9. Cosentino F et al. Eur Heart J 2020;41:255-323.
10. Garber AJ et al. Endocr Pract 2020;26:107-139.
ASCVD, atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease; CKD, chronic kidney disease; CV, cardiovascular; HF, heart failure; SGLT2, sodium-glucose cotransporter 2; 63
T2DM, type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Objective

• To update previous meta-analyses,1-3 with data from VERTIS CV

• These results will further refine estimates of efficacy for CV and


renal outcomes across the SGLT2 inhibitor class

SGLT2, sodium-glucose cotransporter 2.


1. Zelniker TA et al. Lancet 2019:393:31-39. 2. Zelniker TA et al. Circulation 2019;139:2022-2031. 3. Arnott C et al. J Am Heart Assoc 2020;9:e014908. 64
Studies included

• All analyses were primarily conducted on the total patient


population of each of the 6 trials identified:
– EMPA-REG OUTCOME1
– CANVAS Trials Program2
 CANVAS
 CANVAS-R
– DECLARE-TIMI 583
– CREDENCE4
– VERTIS CV

1. Zinman B et al. N Engl J Med 2015;373:2117-2128. 2. Neal B et al. N Engl J Med 2017;377:644-657. 3. Wiviott SD et al. N Engl J Med 2019;380:347-357.
4. Perkovic V et al. N Engl J Med 2019; 380:2295-2306. 65
Meta-analysis methodology

• Hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals were extracted from the
literature to support a pooled meta-analysis across trials
• Fixed-effects modelling was performed with heterogeneity assessed
using Cochran’s Q test statistic, P value, and Higgins and
Thompsons’ I2
• I2 estimates the proportion of observed variance attributable to
heterogeneity of effect beyond chance
– Low: <25%
– Moderate: 25%-75%
– High: >75%

66
Meta-analysis methodology, cont’d

• Key outcomes:
‒ Composite of MACE
‒ CV death
‒ Composite of HHF and CV death
‒ HHF
‒ Composite of renal outcomes
• Secondary analyses were performed on subgroups by presence or
absence of ASCVD at baseline

ASCVD, atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease; CV, cardiovascular; HHF, hospitalization for heart failure. 67
Baseline characteristics of patient populations by trial

EMPA-REG CANVAS DECLARE-


OUTCOME1 Program2 TIMI 583 CREDENCE4 VERTIS CV
SGLT2 inhibitor Empagliflozin Canagliflozin Dapagliflozin Canagliflozin Ertugliflozin
N 7020 10,142 17,160 4401 8246
Duration of follow-up, median,
3.1 2.4 4.2 2.6 3.0
years
Age, mean ± SD, years 63.1 ± 8.6 63.3 ± 8.3 63.9 ± 6.8 63.0 ± 9.2 64.4 ± 8.1
Female, % 28.5 35.8 37.4 33.9 30.0
HbA1c, mean ± SD, % 8.1 ± 0.8 8.2 ± 0.9 8.3 ± 1.2 8.3 ± 1.3 8.2 ± 1.0
Diabetes duration, mean ± SD,
NA 13.5 ± 7.8 11.8 ± 7.8 15.8 ± 8.6 13.0 ± 8.3
years
Established CV disease, % 100 65.6 40.6 50.4 100
History of HF, % 10.1 14.4 10.0 14.8 23.7
Reduced kidney function (eGFR
25.9 20.1 7.4 59.8 21.9
<60 mL/min/1.73 m2), %
CV, cardiovascular; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate; HbA1c, glycated hemoglobin; HF, heart failure; NA, not available; SD, standard deviation.
1. Zinman B et al. N Engl J Med 2015;373:2117-2128. 2. Neal B et al. N Engl J Med 2017;377:644-657. 3. Wiviott SD et al. N Engl J Med 2019;380:347-357. 68
4. Perkovic V et al. N Engl J Med 2019; 380:2295-306.
Time to first MACE

MACE

*Intention-to-treat
population was used for consistency with other trials.
CI, confidence interval; MACE, major adverse cardiovascular events. 69
Time to first MACE – subgroup analysis by ASCVD

MACE

ASCVD, atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease; CI, confidence interval;


MACE, major adverse cardiovascular events. 70
Time to CV death

CV DEATH

CI, confidence interval; CV, cardiovascular. 71


Time to first HHF

HHF

CI, confidence interval; HHF, hospitalization for heart failure. 72


Time to first HHF – subgroup analysis by ASCVD

HHF

ASCVD, atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease; CI, confidence interval;


HHF, hospitalization for heart failure. 73
Time to first renal composite outcome

RENAL
COMPOSITE*

*Renal composite outcome definitions varied across trials.


CI, confidence interval. 74
Summary: Meta-analyses

• Meta-analyses represent the totality of CV and renal outcomes data for the 4 SGLT2
inhibitors available in the US
• These results confirm that the effects of SGLT2 inhibitors on CV and renal outcomes
are largely consistent across the class
– Greatest magnitude of benefit is for reduction in risk for HHF and kidney
disease progression
– Estimates of effect on HHF risk were the most consistent across the trials
• Meta-analyses support contemporary society recommendations to prioritize the use
of SGLT2 inhibitors, independent of glucose control considerations, in patients with
type 2 diabetes with or at high risk for CV and renal complications

CV, cardiovascular; HHF, hospitalization for heart failure; SGLT2, sodium-glucose cotransporter 2. 75
Overall Conclusions
David Cherney, MD, PhD
University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

VERTIS
eValuation of ERTugliflozin effIcacy and Safety
Presenter Disclosure

• David Cherney has received consulting fees or speaking honorarium


or both from AstraZeneca, Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Eli Lilly,
Janssen, Merck & Co., Inc., Prometic, and Sanofi, and has received
operating funds from AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Eli Lilly,
Janssen, Merck & Co., Inc., and Sanofi.

77
Timelines of SGLT2 inhibitor CV outcome trials designed to fulfill
2008 regulatory guidance
2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 2020 2022

EMPA-REG OUTCOME
Empagliflozin

CANVAS Program
Canagliflozin

DECLARE TIMI-58
Dapagliflozin

VERTIS CV
Ertugliflozin

. 78
Timelines of SGLT2 inhibitor CV outcome trials designed to fulfill
2008 regulatory guidance
2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 2020 2022

EMPA-REG OUTCOME
Empagliflozin

CANVAS Program
With addition of VERTIS CV, what are the latest insights?
Canagliflozin
• CV Outcomes
• Renal Outcomes
• Safety Events ofDECLARE
Special Interest
TIMI-58
Dapagliflozin

VERTIS CV
Ertugliflozin

. 79
MACE

MACE
HR (95% CI)
EMPA-REG 0.86
OUTCOME1 (0.74, 0.99)

0.86
CANVAS Program2
(0.75, 0.97)

0.93
DECLARE-TIMI 583
(0.84, 1.03)

0.97
VERTIS CV
(0.85, 1.11)
MACE, major adverse cardiovascular events.
1. Zinman B et al. N Engl J Med 2015;373:2117-2128. 2. Neal B et al. N Engl J Med 2017;377:644-657. 80
3. Wiviott SD et al. N Engl J Med 2019;380:347-357.
VERTIS CV: CV death and HHF*

CV death HHF
15.0 5
HR, 0.92 (95.8% CI, 0.77, 1.11) HR, 0.70 (95% CI, 0.54, 0.90)
P=0.39 P=0.006
12.5 4
Patients with event (%)

10.0 Placebo
Placebo 3
7.5
2
5.0

Ertugliflozin 1 Ertugliflozin
2.5

0.0 0
0 6 12 24 36 48 60 0 6 12 24 36 48 60
No. at risk Month Month
Placebo 2747 2724 2684 2612 1423 1186 227 2747 2701 2635 2534 1361 1119 219
Ertugliflozin 5499 5436 5374 5245 2866 2409 438 5499 5396 5297 5119 2766 2286 402

CV death occurred in 6.2% of patients in the ertugliflozin HHF occurred in 2.5% of patients in the ertugliflozin group
group and 6.7% of patients in the placebo group and 3.6% of patients in the placebo group
*Intention-to-treat
analysis set that included all randomized patients with no upper limit on the ascertainment
window for the superiority outcomes (N=5499 for ertugliflozin and N=2747 for placebo). 81
CI, confidence interval; CV, cardiovascular; HFF, hospitalization for heart failure; HR, hazard ratio.
CV outcomes

MACE CV Death HHF


HR (95% CI) HR (95% CI) HR (95% CI)
EMPA-REG 0.86 0.62 0.65
OUTCOME1 (0.74, 0.99) (0.49, 0.77) (0.50, 0.85)

0.86 0.87 0.67


CANVAS Program2
(0.75, 0.97) (0.72, 1.06) (0.52, 0.87)

0.93 0.98 0.73


DECLARE-TIMI 583
(0.84, 1.03) (0.82 ,1.17) (0.61, 0.88)

0.97 0.92 0.70


VERTIS CV
(0.85, 1.11) (0.77, 1.11) (0.54, 0.90)
CV, cardiovascular; HHF, hospitalization for heart failure; MACE, major adverse cardiovascular events.
1. Zinman B et al. N Engl J Med 2015;373:2117-2128. 2. Neal B et al. N Engl J Med 2017;377:644-657. 82
3. Wiviott SD et al. N Engl J Med 2019;380:347-357.
CV death endpoint in SGLT2 inhibitor CV outcomes trials
9
EMPA-REG OUTCOME1 CANVAS Program2
Patients with event (%)

12

Patients with event (%)


8 HR, 0.62 HR, 0.87
10 (95% CI, 0.72, 1.06)
7 (95% CI, 0.49, 0.77)
6 P<0.001 8
5
6
4
3 4
2 Placebo
2 Placebo
1 Empagliflozin
Canagliflozin
0
0 6 12 18 24 30 36 42 48 0 26 52 104 156 208 260 312 338
Month Week

DECLARE-TIMI 583 15.0 VERTIS CV

Patients with event (%)


12.5 HR, 0.92
Dapagliflozin Placebo HR (95% CI) (95.8% CI, 0.77–1.11)
N=8582 N=8578 10.0
P=0.39
Rate/1000
Rate/1000 n (%)
n (%) patient-years 7.5
patient-years
245 (2.9) 7.0 249 (2.9) 7.1 0.98 (0.82, 1.17) 5.0

2.5 Placebo
0.5 1 2 Ertugliflozin
Favors Dapagliflozin Favors Placebo 0.0
0 6 12 24 36 48 60
CI confidence interval; CV, cardiovascular; HR, hazard ratio Month
1. Zinman B et al. N Engl J Med 2015;373:2117-2128; 2. Neal B et al. N Engl J Med 2017;377:644-657; 83
3. Wiviott SD et al. N Engl J Med 2019;380:347-357.
HHF outcomes in SGLT2 inhibitor CV outcomes trials
7
EMPA-REG OUTCOME1 CANVAS Program2
8
6 HR, 0.65 HR, 0.67

Patients with event (%)


7
Patients with event (%)

(95% CI, 0.50, 0.85) (95% CI, 0.52, 0.87)


5 6
4 5
4
3
3
2 2
Placebo Placebo
1 Empagliflozin 1 Canagliflozin
0
0
0 6 12 18 24 30 36 42 48 0 26 52 104 156 208 260 312 338
Month Week
4 5
DECLARE-TIMI 583 VERTIS CV

Patients with event (%)


Patients with event (%)

HR, 0.73 4 HR, 0.70


3 (95% CI, 0.61, 0.88) (95% CI, 0.54, 0.90)
3
2
2
1
Placebo 1 Placebo
Dapagliflozin Ertugliflozin
0 0
0 180 360 540 720 900 1080 1260 1440 0 6 12 24 36 48 60
Day Month
CI, confidence interval; CV, cardiovascular; HHF, hospitalization for heart failure; HR, hazard ratio; SGLT2, sodium-glucose cotransporter 2. 84
1. Zinman B et al. N Engl J Med 2015;373:2117-2128. 2. Neal B et al. N Engl J Med 2017;377:644-657.
3. Wiviott SD et al. N Engl J Med 2019;380:347-357 (figure provided by D.K. McGuire, with permission).
CV outcomes

MACE CV Death HHF


HR (95% CI) HR (95% CI) HR (95% CI)
EMPA-REG
MACE:
0.86 0.62 0.65
OUTCOME 1
(0.74,
• MACE efficacy across 0.99) modest
class generally (0.49, 0.77) (0.50, 0.85)
‒ EMPA-REG OUTCOME significant on MACE due to effect on CV death and no
effect on MI or stroke
‒ CANVAS significant0.86
on MACE due to contribution 0.87 0.67
from MI, CV death, and stroke
CANVAS Program 2
‒ DECLARE and(0.75,VERTIS 0.97)
CV only found trend(0.72,
on MACE1.06) (0.52, 0.87)
CV Death:
• Only EMPA-REG OUTCOME found significant reduction, driving heterogeneity in the
0.93 0.98 0.73
DECLARE-TIMI 58 3
beneficial effect for the class
(0.84, 1.03) (0.82, 1.17) (0.61, 0.88)
HHF:
• Consistent effects across class are substantial
• Benefits are independent0.97
of baseline ASCVD, prior HF,0.92
and across spectrum of 0.70
VERTIS CV
baseline eGFR (0.85, 1.11) (0.77, 1.11) (0.54, 0.90)
1. Zinman B et al. N Engl J Med 2015;373:2117-2128; 2. Neal B et al. N Engl J Med 2017;377:644-657;
3. Wiviott SD et al. N Engl J Med 2019;380:347-357. 85
Why do MACE and CV death results differ across SGLT2 inhibitor trials?

• Differences in mechanism?
– SGLT2 vs SGLT1 specificity? Off-target effect?
• Differences in patient populations studied?
– Secondary prevention populations studied?
 Broadly similar with MACE event rates on par with high-risk group (~4%/year)
– Regional differences?
• Differences in study design?
– Sample size?
– Inclusion/exclusion criteria?
– Definition of endpoints?
– Collection of data/endpoints?
– Analysis of endpoints?
• Differences in comorbidity management after 2015?
– More intensive BP goals after SPRINT reported and guidelines updated?
– More intensive lipid management after PCSK9 inhibitor trials reported and guidelines updated?

86
Renal outcomes

Renal-related Composite Outcomes

Doubling of the serum creatinine level


EMPA-REG accompanied by an eGFR ≤ 45 mL/min/1.73m2,
initiation of renal-replacement therapy, or death
OUTCOME1 from renal disease

Sustained 40% reduction in eGFR, renal-


CANVAS Program2 replacement therapy (dialysis or transplantation),
or death from renal causes

Sustained ≥40% decrease in eGFR to


DECLARE-TIMI 583 <60 mL/min/1.73 m2, end-stage renal disease, or
death from renal causes

Renal death, dialysis/transplant, or doubling of


VERTIS CV serum creatinine from baseline
CV, cardiovascular; CI, confidence interval; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate.
1. Wanner C et al. N Engl J Med 2016;374:323-334. 2. Neal B et al. N Engl J Med 2017;377:644-657. 87
3. Wiviott SD et al. N Engl J Med 2019;380:347-357.
Renal outcomes

Renal-related Composite Outcomes


HR (95% CI)
Doubling of the serum creatinine level
EMPA-REG accompanied by an eGFR ≤ 45 mL/min/1.73m2, 0.54
initiation of renal-replacement therapy, or death (0.40, 0.75)
OUTCOME1 from renal disease

Sustained 40% reduction in eGFR, renal- 0.60


CANVAS Program2 replacement therapy (dialysis or transplantation),
or death from renal causes (0.47, 0.77)

Sustained ≥40% decrease in eGFR to 0.53


DECLARE-TIMI 583 <60 mL/min/1.73 m2, end-stage renal disease, or
death from renal causes (0.43, 0.66)

Renal death, dialysis/transplant, or doubling of 0.81


VERTIS CV serum creatinine from baseline (0.63, 1.04)
CV, cardiovascular; CI, confidence interval; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate; HR, hazard ratio.
1. Wanner C et al. N Engl J Med 2016;374:323-334. 2. Neal B et al. N Engl J Med 2017;377:644-657. 88
3. Wiviott SD et al. N Engl J Med 2019;380:347-357.
VERTIS CV: eGFR over time

2
Placebo Ertugliflozin 5 mg Ertugliflozin 15 mg
Mean change in eGFR from baseline

1
Baseline eGFR (mL/min/1.73 m2) 75.7 76.0 76.2
0
–-1
(mL/min/1.73 m2)

–-2
–-3
–-4
–-5 A lower degree of decline in eGFR over time, with a
difference in LS means relative to placebo at Month 60 of
–-6 3.01 mL/min/1.73m2 (1.63, 4.39) and 3.05 (1.67, 4.43),
respectively, for ertugliflozin 5 mg and ertugliflozin 15 mg
–-7 (p<0.001 for both comparisons).

–-8
0 3 6 12 16 20 24 30 36 42 48 52 60
Month

eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate. 89


Renal outcomes

Renal-related Composite Outcomes


HR (95% CI)
Doubling of the serum creatinine level
EMPA-REG accompanied by an eGFR ≤ 45 mL/min/1.73m2,
Although other CV outcomes trials showed renal outcomes benefit,
0.54
initiation of renal-replacement therapy, or death (0.40, 0.75)
OUTCOME
VERTIS1
CV only showed a trend inrenal
from thisdisease
initial renal analysis

VERTIS CV showed: Sustained 40% reduction in eGFR, renal-


0.60
CANVAS Program2
replacement therapy (dialysis or transplantation),
• Effect on kidney-related outcomes generally
or death from consistent with other (0.47,
renal causes SGLT20.77)
inhibitor trials
• Effects on acute and Sustained ≥40% decrease
chronic eGFR in eGFR
consistent to
with other 0.53
SGLT2 inhibitors
DECLARE-TIMI
• Renal58
3 <60
AEs in line mL/min/1.73
with m , end-stage
2
SGLT2 inhibitor class renal disease, or (0.43, 0.66) death from renal causes
Definitions of renal-related composite outcomes vary across trials
Renal death, dialysis/transplant, or doubling of 0.81
VERTIS CV serum creatinine from baseline (0.63, 1.04)
AE, adverse event; CV, cardiovascular; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate; HR, hazard ratio; SGLT2, sodium-glucose cotransporter 2.
1. Wanner C et al. N Engl J Med 2016;374:323-334. 2. Neal B et al. N Engl J Med 2017;377:644-657. 90
3. Wiviott SD et al. N Engl J Med 2019;380:347-357.
Safety events of special interest

Event Empagliflozin1 Canagliflozin2 Canagliflozin3 Dapagliflozin4 Ertugliflozin

EMPA-REG OUTCOME CANVAS and CANVAS-R CREDENCE DECLARE-TIMI 58 VERTIS CV

Empagliflozin Placebo Canagliflozin Placebo Canagliflozin Placebo Dapagliflozin Placebo Ertugliflozin Placebo
N=4687 N=2333 N=5790 N=4344 N=2200 N=2197 N=8574 N=8569 N=5493 N=2745
Rate/1000 patient- Rate/1000 patient-
years years
n (%) n (%) n (%)
n (%) n (%)

6.3 3.4 12.3 11.2


Amputation 88 (1.9) 43 (1.8) 123 (1.4) 113 (1.3) 111 (2.0) 45 (1.6)
140 (2.4) 47 (1.1) 70 (3.2) 63 (2.9)

1. Zinman B et al. N Engl J Med 2015;373:2117-2128. 2. Neal B et al. N Engl J Med 2017;377:644-657.
3. Perkovic V et al. N Engl J Med 2019;380:2295-2306. 4. Wiviott SD et al. N Engl J Med 2019;380:347-357. 91
Safety events of special interest

Event Empagliflozin1 Canagliflozin2 Canagliflozin3 Dapagliflozin4 Ertugliflozin

EMPA-REG OUTCOME CANVAS and CANVAS-R CREDENCE DECLARE-TIMI 58 VERTIS CV

Empagliflozin Placebo Canagliflozin Placebo Canagliflozin Placebo Dapagliflozin Placebo Ertugliflozin Placebo
N=4687 N=2333 N=5790 N=4344 N=2200 N=2197 N=8574 N=8569 N=5493 N=2745

Rate/1000 patient- Rate/1000 patient-


n (%) years years n (%) n (%)
n (%) n (%)

15.4 11.9 11.8 12.1


Fracture 179 (3.8) 91 (3.9) 457 (5.3) 440 (5.1) 201 (3.7) 98 (3.6)
NA NA 67 (3.0) 68 (3.1)

Diabetic 0.6 0.3 2.2 0.2


4 (0.1) 1 (<0.1) 27 (0.3) 12 (0.1) 19 (0.3) 2 (0.1)
Ketoacidosis NA 11 (0.5)
NA 1 (<0.1)

1. Zinman B et al. N Engl J Med 2015;373:2117-2128. 2. Neal B et al. N Engl J Med 2017;377:644-657.
3. Perkovic V et al. N Engl J Med 2019;380:2295-2306. 4. Wiviott SD et al. N Engl J Med 2019;380:347-357. 92
NA, not available.
Summary and conclusions

• VERTIS CV achieved its primary endpoint of non-inferiority for MACE compared


with placebo in patients with T2DM and established ASCVD, demonstrating the
CV safety of ertugliflozin
• VERTIS CV provides further evidence of the CV safety of SGLT2 inhibitors for
the treatment of patients with T2DM and adds to the evidence of benefit on HHF
consistent across the class
• VERTIS CV safety data do not alter estimates of risk for any specific safety
events
• Meta-analyses support contemporary society recommendations to prioritize the
use of SGLT2 inhibitors, independent of glucose control considerations, in
patients with T2DM with or at high risk for CV and renal complications

CV, cardiovascular; SGLT2, sodium-glucose cotransporter 2; T2DM, type 2 diabetes mellitus. 93


Acknowledgments

• We thank
– all the patients who volunteered to enroll in VERTIS CV
– the National Retention Experts
 Argentina (Diego Aizenberg), Australia (Anthony Roberts), Bosnia (Azra Durak-Nalbantic), Bulgaria
(Dimitar Raev), Canada (Thomas Ransom), Colombia (Jose Luis Accini-Mendoza), Croatia (Silvija
Canecki-Varzic), Czech Republic, Georgia (Elene Giorgadze), Greece (Konstantinos Tsioufis), Hong
Kong (Katheryn Tan Choon Beng), Hungary, Israel (Basil Lewis), Italy (Piermarco Piatti), Korea
(Bong Soo Cha), Latvia (Valdis Pirags), Lithuania (Vaidotas Urbanavicius), Mexico (Pedro Alberto
Garcia Hernandez), Netherlands, New Zealand (Scott Russell), Philippines (Florence Santos),
Poland (Monika Lukaszewicz), Romania (Noemi Pletea), Russia (Svetlana Berns), Serbia (Teodora
Beljic Zivkovic), Slovakia, South Africa (Larry Distiller), Sweden, Taiwan (Dee Pei), Thailand (Clara
Chow), Turkey, Ukraine (Oleksandr Parkhomenko), United Kingdom (Manish Saxena), United States
(William French). Countries without an NRE listed were overseen by the Baim Institute for Clinical
Research (Christopher Cannon, Julie Sutherland, Jessica Lamp, Hoey Chyi Lim)

• The representatives from the 531 enrolling centers in 34 participating countries:

94
Argentina: Jose Maria Pozzi, Laura Maffei, Lucrecia Nardone, Horacio Sessa, Daniela Garcia Brasca, Diego Aizenberg, Claudia Emilce Baccaro,
Elizabeth Silvana Gelersztein, Fabian Calella Pedro Rosario, Ricardo Leon de la Fuente, Silvia Gorban de Lapertosa, Natacha Maldonado, Adrian
Cruciani, Ines Bartolacci, Eduardo Hasbani, Gustavo Frechtel, Nelson Rodriguez Papini, Alejandro Pereyra, Oscar Montana, Cesar Zaidman, Maria
Mansilla; Australia: Bronte Ayres, Richard Simpson, Sarah Glastras, Maged William, Timothy Davis, David Colquhoun, Joseph Proietto, Adam Roberts,
Anthony Roberts, Bronwyn Stuckey, Gary Wittert, Georgia Soldatos, Parind Vora; Bosnia and Herzegovina: Zumreta Kusljugic, Azra Avdagic, Azra
Durak-Nalbantic, Kanita Ibrahimpasic, Bosanko Horozic, Muhamed Spuzic, Valentina Soldat-Stankovic, Dragan Stevanovic, Damir Koco, Zaim Jatic,
Ibrahim Terzic, Ljiljana Markovic Potkonjak, Besim Prnjavorac, Aleksandar Radanovic, Muhamed Salihbasic; Bulgaria: Dimitar Dimitrov, Anastas
Stoikov, Velichka Damyanova, Darina Vasileva, Kiril Kirilov, Ivailo Lefterov, Lyudmila Lyubenova, Dimitar Raev, Veska Tsanova, Mitko Mitkov, Rositsa
Shumkova, Kostadin Kichukov, Tatyana Simeonova-Nikolova; Canada: Jean-Marie Ekoe, Shekhar A. Pandey, Richard Dumas, Vincent Woo, Kevin
Saunders, James Conway, Laurie Breger, Christian Constance, Michael O'Mahony, Patrice Perron, Claude Garceau, Michael Csanadi, Ronald
Bourgeois, Timothy Salter, Andre Frechette, Ariel Diaz, Thomas Ransom; Colombia: Gregorio Sanchez-Vallejo, Sandra Isabel Barrera Silva, Jose
Accini Mendoza, Luis Garcia Ortiz, Hernan Yupanqui Lozno, Dora Molina de Salazar, Julian Coronel Arroyo; Croatia: Pocanic Darko, Srecko Tusek,
Sonja Slosic Weiss, Canecki-Varzic Silvija, Altabas Velimir, Zukanovic Sidbela, Tatjana Cikac, Jasna Vucak, Ljiljana Cenan, Zrinka Boljkovac, Srecko
Margetic, Ksenija Kranjcevic; Czech Republic: Vera Adamkova, Kyselova Pavlina, Bedrich Wasserburger, Tomas Hrdina, Katerina Smolenakova;
Georgia: Chagunava Ketevan, Zurab Pagava, Merab Mamatsashvili, Koba Burnadze, Vakhtang Chumburidze, Zaza Lominadze, Lali Nikoleishvili,
Bondo Kobulia, Nana Koberidze, Nodar Emukhvari, Zviad Kipiani, David Metreveli, Salome Glonti, Elene Giorgadze, Tamaz Shaburishvili, Gulnara
Chapidze, Julieta Gulua, Irakli Gogorishvili, Ekaterine Berukashvili, Shalva Petriashvili, Givi Kurashvili; Greece: Moses Elisaf, Stavros Bousboulas,
Nikolaos Tentolouris, Konstantinos Tsioufis; Hong Kong: Andrea Luk, Kelvin Kai Hang Yiu, Chiu Chi Tsang, Vincent Tok Fai Yeung, Alex Pui-Wai Lee,
Kathryn Choon Beng Tan, Ronald Ching Wan Ma; Hungary: Krisztina Beatrix Wudi, Zoltan Bujtor, Zsuzsanna Feher, Laszlo Koranyi, Gyorgy Paragh,
Szilard Vasas, Zsolt Pauker, Nora Kesmarki, Janos Takacs, Laszlo Nagy, Csaba Salamon, Zsuzsanna Papp, Csaba Hajdu; Israel: Galina Abramov,
Osamah Hussein, Victor Vishlitzky, Dror Dicker, Mahmud Darawsha, Baruch Itzhak, Dov Gavish, Julio Wainstein, Basil Lewis, Eliezer Klainman, Amos
Katz, Mazen Elias, Rosane Ness-Abramof, Tony Hayek; Italy: Emanuela Orsi, Giuseppe Lembo, Piermarco Piatti, Agostino Consoli, Sergio Berti,
Giuseppe Pugliese, Giuseppe Derosa; Republic of Korea: Hak Chul Jang, Moon-Kyu Lee, Nam Hoon Kim, Bong-Soo Cha, Kyong Soo Park, Kun Ho
Yoon, Chul Woo Ahn, Kwan Woo Lee, Sei Hyun Baik; Latvia: Valdis Pirags, Sigita Pastare; Lithuania: Jurate Kavaliauskiene, Audrone Augusteniene,
Antanas Navickas, Vaidotas Urbanavicius, Roma Kavaliauskiene, Ausra Sirutaviciene; Mexico: Guillermo Antonio Llamas Esperon, Juan Villagordoa
Mesa, Pedro Alberto Garcia Hernandez, Rosa Luna Ceballos, Carlos Aguilar Salinas, Guillermo Gonzalez Galvez, Guillermo Melendez-Mier, Raul
Aguilar Orozco; Netherlands: Harry Crijns, Klaas Hoogenberg; New Zealand: Helen Lunt, Russell Scott, John Baker, Michael Williams; Philippines:
Marian Denopol, Araceli Panelo, Louie Tirador, Grace Aquitania, Gregorio Rogelio, Florence Amorado-Santos, Ramoncito Habaluyas, Allyn Sy Rosa,
Ellen Palomares, Geraldine Ebo, Chela Marie Romero; Poland: Joanna Gladczak, Jaroslaw Hawryluk, Edward Franek, Monika Lukaszewicz,
Aleksandra Madej-Dmochowska, Anna Jeznach-Steinhagen, Grzegorz Sokolowski, Jan Ruxer, Agnieszka Karczmarczyk, Ewa Krzyzagorska, Iwona
Wozniak, Anna Olech-Cudzik, Marek Dwojak, Izabela Anand, Krzysztof Strojek, Ewa Czernecka, Karolina Antkowiak-Piatyszek, Aleksandra Rozanska,
Waldemar Gadzinski, Piotr Mader, Monika Kuligowska-jakubowska, Malgorzata Arciszewska, Andrzej Stankiewicz, Katarzyna Cypryk, Andrzej Wittek,
Joanna Sawer-Szewczyk; Romania: Gabriela Negrisanu, Noemi Pletea, Daniela Zaharie, Ella Pintilei, Adriana Cif, Livia Duma, Iosif Szilagyi, Ildiko
Halmagyi, Magdalena Morosanu, Mircea Munteanu, Adrian Albota, Alexandrina Popescu, Dan Anton Enculescu, Nicolae Hancu, Valerica Nafornita,
Lacramioara Croitoru; Russian Federation: Elena Pavlysh, Konstantin Nikolaev, Alexandr Vishnevsky, Olga Reshetko, Liudmila Kvitkova, Olga
Barbarash, Tatiana Rodionova, Oxana Shaydyuk, Olga Ershova, Petr Chizhov, Svetlana Berns, Elena Rechkova, Sergey Yakushin, Olga Zanozina, Yuri
VERTIS
eValuation of ERTugliflozin effIcacy and Safety

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