FDA Approves Ozempic to Treat Kidney Disease

Ozempic becomes the first GLP-1 treatment option for people with type 2 diabetes and chronic kidney disease

Mario Tama/Getty Ozempic

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Ozempic

The Food and Drug Administration has approved Ozempic to reduce the risk of kidney disease.

On Tuesday, Jan. 28, the agency announced that the drug can now be used to reduce the risk of kidney failure and disease progression, as well as death due to cardiovascular disease, in adults with type 2 diabetes and chronic kidney disease.

Ozempic is already widely used and was first FDA-approved in 2017 to treat type 2 diabetes. The medication — taken weekly by injection in the thigh, stomach or arm — is a brand name for semaglutide, which works in the brain to impact satiety.

The FDA’s new approval makes the drug the first GLP-1 treatment option for people with type 2 diabetes and chronic kidney disease.

"Chronic kidney disease is very serious and common in patients living with type 2 diabetes and represents a critical need for adults living with these comorbidities,” said Anna Windle — senior vice president of clinical development, medical & regulatory affairs for Novo Nordisk, maker of Ozempic — in a press release. “This approval for Ozempic allows us to more broadly address conditions within cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic syndrome, which affects millions of adults and could have serious consequences if left untreated.”

Related: Ozempic and Similar Drugs May Offer Health Benefits Beyond Weight Loss, Including Reduced Alcohol Cravings

Getty Ozempic injector

Getty

Ozempic injector

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The decision was made following a clinical trial of more than 3,500 people where researchers found that weekly injections of the medication reduced the risk of kidney disease worsening by 24% in people who had diabetes.

Additionally, the risk of death from heart disease in adults with both type 2 diabetes and chronic kidney disease was reduced by about 5%.

“From my point of view as a doctor, you don’t get [diabetes, obesity, chronic kidney disease and cardiovascular disease] in isolation,” Stephen Gough, Novo Nordisk’s global chief medical officer, told CNBC. “These illnesses, unfortunately, co-segregate. They cluster within the same individuals. So if you have a medicine that can target each of these co-morbidities in one injection, then you’re addressing what really matters to the patient.”

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