PodClips Logo
PodClips Logo
The Peter Attia Drive
AMA #53: Metabolic health & pharmacologic interventions: SGLT-2 inhibitors, metformin, GLP-1 agonists, and the impact of statins
AMA #53: Metabolic health & pharmacologic interventions: SGLT-2 inhibitors, metformin, GLP-1 agonists, and the impact of statins

AMA #53: Metabolic health & pharmacologic interventions: SGLT-2 inhibitors, metformin, GLP-1 agonists, and the impact of statins

The Peter Attia DriveGo to Podcast Page

Nick Stenson, Peter Attia
·
13 Clips
·
Nov 13, 2023
Listen to Clips & Top Moments
Episode Summary
Episode Transcript
0:11
Hey everyone, welcome to a sneak peek ask me anything or am a episode of the drive podcast. I'm your host Peter attea at the end of this short episode. I'll explain how you can access the AMA episodes in full along with a ton of other membership benefits. We've created or you can learn more now by going to Peter Atia m.com.
0:30
It's / subscribe. So without further delay. Here's today's sneak peek of the ask me anything episode. Welcome to ask me anything. Am a number 53. I'm joined. Once again by my co-host Nick Stenson in today's episode. We'll discuss two different topics first will have a follow-up to a.m. EST 51 where we focused on metabolic disease one thing we didn't really cover in that ama which would cover in much more detail in this am a are the various.
0:59
Pharmacologic tools that we have at our disposal to improve an individual's metabolic Health these include a discussion around sglt2 Inhibitors, which are also of interest for their potential gyro protective benefits along with metformin glp-1 agonists and Other Drugs that can improve one's metabolic Health from there. We shift our discussion to look very specifically at the relationship between perhaps the most prescribed class of drugs out there statins and their relation to insulin resistance.
1:29
Resistance is a topic. We get a lot of questions on in fact so many that we decided that it was worth half an AMA so we cover all of the issues here and all of the data around statins and not just the relationship to type 2 diabetes, which is generally recognized as a small issue with certain statins, but much more broadly around the relationship between statins and metabolic health. And of course we put this in the broader context of net benefit versus Net harm. So if you're a subscriber and you want to watch the full video of this podcast,
2:00
You can find it on the show notes page. If you're not a subscriber, you can watch a sneak peek of the video on our YouTube page. So without further delay. I hope you enjoy am a number 53 Peter. Welcome to another am a how you doing doing very well. How's that toothpick treating you very well love me some toothpicks. Do you ever tell the story about how you ended up with so many I think I have shared that story. In fact, I know I've shared that story because
2:29
When I meet strangers, sometimes they've asked me if they can have some of those toothpicks. Are they still to this day at the best toothpicks you've ever had? No, I would actually say my toothpick game has evolved a little bit and I have started to like other types of toothpicks. Those toothpicks are still remarkable, but I don't think I could call them the single best toothpick in the history of dentition. Well, maybe a future ama if there's enough demand we can break out the different types of toothpicks and Pros.
3:00
Cons of each but not today. So today we are going to talk kind of in follow-up for the first part 2 a.m. EST 51, which was on metabolic disease and metabolic disease is one of your four horsemen that you talk about in the book and talk about on podcast to other three being cardiovascular disease neurodegenerative disease cancer in that am a we talked about how metabolic disease feeds those on their types of diseases. We went to insane.
3:29
In detail and how to measure and know where you're at and how your metabolic health is and then we talked about some lifestyle factors that you can do to improve your metabolic Health. The one thing that was missing from that ama which we get a lot of questions on is what about the pharmacological options for people to improve their metabolic health. So the first part of this AMA will talk about that that will include sglt2 Inhibitors metformin glp-1 and a few others and
4:00
And on some of those drugs such as sglt2 Inhibitors will also cover if there's potentially a gyro protective benefit to those because we also see questions from people who may be in good metabolic Health, but based on some study results are curious on that part 2, we're going to cover something we get asked about an insane amount and that is the relationship between statins and insulin resistance and we see a lot of questions come through and so we pulled all of them for that. We'll get to those here.
4:29
So all that said before we get started anything you want to add? No, I think that's a great synopsis of our very ambitious goals today. We'll see what we can do the first one sglt2 Inhibitors. This is something that you and Rich Miller talked about on the podcast where rich delve into the high t p we're going to have Rich Miller back on again, but we receive a lot of questions on sglt2 Inhibitors and it would be helpful. I just think to just cover the basics of what are they? And how are they in it?
4:59
Developed I guess we could sort of demystify the acronym a little bit. So sglt2 is kind of a crappy way to abbreviate sodium-glucose cotransport ER protein to I know it's someone's thinking which is but where's the L? And where's the pee don't ask that's just the way it works in biology. We come up with really really bad acronyms sodium-glucose cotransport a protein to is sglt2 and on.
5:29
Lastly this is a great example of where a picture is going to be more valuable than just me rambling. So for those of you that are just listening to us, I'm going to do my best to try to explain this but anyone who can watch this on video be it on YouTube or on our Channel. Please do that. Okay. So Nick, please pull up said figure of a nephron got it. Okay. So the nephron is the functional cellular unit of the kidney and in the proximal tubules.
5:59
I don't want to overwhelm us with renal physiology here. But the kidneys kind of a unique organ in that it's really a tiny organ, but it is overrun with blood. So there's lots of plasma that's passing through the renal arteries. And the reason for that is of course the importance of filtration. So in a nutshell, this is the way the kidney works and this was explained by one of my professors in medical school. I never forgot this and I found that to be a very valuable way to think about it, you know, if you were a kid and your mom said, I want you to go into your room and clean
6:29
In your dresser out where you have your socks your underwear your t-shirts your shorts and all that stuff. It's tempting to sort of go in there. And while everything is in the dresser try to organize it and pull things out that you don't need and keep what you do need the kidney doesn't work. That way. The kidney has one way of filtering which is it goes to the dresser and takes every single thing out and then it simply pulls back in what it wants to keep that's very different than the kidney saying I'm going to go and identify things that we don't need or we don't want and pull.
6:59
Out why because in the case of the latter, it assumes evolutionarily that the kidney will forever be able to recognize bad things. But in the former, it assumes evolutionarily, but the only thing the kidney needs to understand is what is good. And obviously that's a much better strategy because that's a finite set of things as opposed to an infinite set of things. So the way this works at the cellular level is as plasma.
7:29
A rolls through the kidney. It pulls everything out. It just completely dumps everything out glucose sodium potassium magnesium. Chloride you name it as the filtrate runs through the kidney. It's selectively pulled back into the circulation the things that it knows we need and that's why the kidney is the most important organ in the body for regulating our electrolytes. So there's an interesting opportunity here because one of those things that happens to get filtered is glucose.
7:59
Even though the kidneys job is not really managing glucose concentration. There's an interesting opportunity to prevent the kidney from reabsorbing all of the glucose that it immediately shunted out when the plasma came through the kidney in the first place. So in other words, even though the kidneys goal is not interfering with glucose concentration the way it is doing deliberately with sodium potassium chloride, etcetera There's an opportunity. So if you look at this figure now, you'll see
8:29
See on the left hand side of it a little purple box and that's called s GL T 1 & 2 there are two of them. But obviously we're talking about the sodium co-transporter to here and you can see that it pulls sodium and glucose into the cell together by the way as an aside people who may remember the podcast we did on hydration might recall that we talked about how mixtures of glucose and sodium are the best ways to hydrate cells if you're really
8:59
In for water movement. This kind of is a bit of a reminder why sodium and glucose move together very efficiently, but let's put that aside for a moment as you can see. Look at this diagram if you had a way to block that purple thing you would be able to keep more glucose in the urine on this graph this figure rather. The right hand side is where things are returning to the plasma going back to the body. The left hand side is things that will be excreted in the urine. So when you block sglt2,
9:30
You prevent sodium and glucose from being reabsorbed by the cell to then be put back into the plasma. And therefore you will pee out more sodium and glucose and therefore this has become a very attractive solution for people whose blood glucose is too high taking a very big step back. How do we manage the problem of type 2 diabetes? That's really what we're talking about today. You can manage it by reducing glucose. You can manage it.
9:59
Increasing insulin sensitivity you can manage it by increasing insulin itself. This is a strategy that says here's how we're going to lower glucose metformin, which we'll talk about as well is also a glucose lowering strategy whereas glp-1 tends to be probably more of an insulin sensitizing strategy coupled with to some extent a glucose lowering strategy by the fact that you simply eat less. So with that said any other questions on sglt2 Inhibitors, that is to
10:29
Say the class of drugs that block this protein now, I think that's a good overview of what they do. I think some other people reached out and a good follow-up to that is how were they developed initially in the first place to solve this problem. Yeah. So it's not an uncommon story in pharmacotherapy where there is a naturally occurring substance that sort of does this and then a drug company will come in or beside test will come in and figure out a way to make a better version of the
10:59
Molecule that occurs in nature by the way, metformin is a naturally occurring molecule statins are naturally occurring molecule. So the naturally occurring molecules have pros and cons but that's an impetus for further development and the same is true here. So there's a chemical called Flores een primarily found in Apple's. I think it's found in the skin of a few other fruits in relatively small quantities and was originally isolated if I'm not mistaken in the 17th century.
11:29
Yeah, and it was part of the Botanical solutions to people with various infectious diseases. Malaria things of that nature to be completely honest with you. I don't actually know how efficacious it was. However, it started to become clear and this is the important point. Of course is that when people were given fluorescein they develop glucose urea, they developed glucose in their urine and this became a very important early diagnostic step in the treatment of type 2 diabetes and in other words a
11:59
Sir William Osler who's the father of modern medicine in this country and Canada for that matter owsla was a Canadian used to actually taste his patients urine to determine if they had type 2 diabetes. So here you took patients who didn't have diabetes and you could induce this idea that we saw in people with diabetes was there peeing out glucose. So people put two and two together and said, we'll wait a minute if we're giving this drug to people and they're peeing out glucose and they're not diabetic to begin with then this drug is doing something that is impacting that pathway.
12:29
That's effectively what led to the development of these drugs. In fact, if you pull up a photo and I think we have a picture of fluorescein next to a modern-day sglt2 Inhibitors. You can see the similarity just pull it up. So there you go floor is een naturally occurring on the left and an sglt2 Inhibitors on the right and you don't have to be a biochemist to recognize that there are some similarities here now, there are far fewer similarities.
12:59
Between these two molecules, then there are between the existing batch of sglt2 Inhibitors and there are currently four of them out there and they all have really really unpleasant names that are not necessarily that important but they all end in Flows In not surprisingly their names will come up as we go along and we'll probably talk maybe a little bit more about can I go flows in a minute because it ties into the ITP study, but the point here is all of these de flows.
13:29
Ins if you will or glyph flows ins have kind of a similar structure, which is this glucose ring with an aromatic group and then they differ basically around that and these differences obviously allow you to have drug companies to make different versions of drugs from an IP perspective, but they also tend to be dosed differently and that reflexive very different potency of the drugs as well. Although we're not talking about it today, you mentioned statins and Metformin which will cover are naturally occurring rapamycin is also
13:59
To be occurring, correct? That's right. Yeah and rapamycin interestingly is given basically in the format in which it was discovered. Whereas sglt2 Inhibitors are not there now basically derivatives of what exists in nature metformin is actually pretty close to the original molecule. It was discovered in the Lilac Lily's the very very weakest of all statins, which is private call or pravastatin is closer to the most naturally occurring statins that are found in
14:29
Add yeast rice, so it is really interesting that nature has given pharmacologists a head start on drug development in many cases. The other follow-up is push came to shove. Would you be tasting your patients urine to help diagnose anything? Yeah, I mean push comes to shove the world has run out of glucose dipsticks and we have all of the exact same technology we have today except we somehow have lost the ability to determine if
14:59
Glucose in urine so we can still split atoms and do all those other things but we just can't do that. One thing. Is that what you're saying? Yes. Yeah just really trying to understand if your patients are listening. How dedicated are you? Yeah to their health. I'm going to come with a yes on that and I'm not going to do it alone. I'm going to enlist the help of my entire clinical team. That's right. I'm sure they're very happy to hear that as well. So the follow-up which hints at what you talked about there as the next question we get a ton of is what are the different sglt2?
15:29
T2 Inhibitors, and what do we know about the differences between them? I think anyone who's thinking about potentially taking these or is taking these will be interested in that and so maybe we can just run through that quick as it sets the stage going forward. I think I already alluded to one of them. Can I go flows in and I think it's probably the one for which we have the most data. It was approved exactly 10 years ago. So in 2013 and was looked at both in isolation and in combination with metformin, which was obviously the standard of care.
15:59
For initiation therapy it in many ways still is so two things were observed. So the first was that in a dose-dependent manner meaning more drug more response. If I'm not mistaken. Can I go Flows In is dosed. I want to say between 100 and 300 milligrams daily. But as the dose went up you saw a greater increase in hemoglobin A1c reduction and the results were reasonable. So somewhere between a point seven and one percent reduction in hemoglobin A1c. And by the way what I mean when I say,
16:29
21 percent I mean absolute reduction in A1C not relative. So if your hemoglobin A1c was 6.1, you would expect it to go down to as much as five point one. That's a very big reduction in hemoglobin A1c. And interestingly when a second trial was done that looked at metformin plus kananga flows in it found an average reduction in the hemoglobin A1c of 1.8% That's really significant. So somebody shows up at seven.
16:59
8% hemoglobin A1c. So they're clearly and well into the territory of type 2 diabetes where the threshold is 6.5 percent and that person is going to come down to 6.0% So they're going to go from being in a state of raging type 2 diabetes to being pre-diabetic metformin is typically first line. I suspect part of that has to do with cost but I also believe it has to do with efficacy. I mean metformin mono therapy is pretty robust depends on the study, but it's up to 1.3 percent reduction in hemoglobin.
17:29
See after about six months so sizable benefits get we've talked about metformin a lot on this podcast, you know, I forgot to look for this earlier and I should have I don't believe that we see the same amount of weight loss with can I go flows in that we see with metformin so metformin is if I had to guess someone will check me on this. I'm sure if I had to guess I would say monotherapy metformin would be associated with slightly more weight loss than mono therapy sglt2 Inhibitors. But again, that's something worth understanding now, we're going to talk about this in more.
17:59
Detail but the other important question here is are there other benefits associated with B it can I go flows in or other sglt2 Inhibitors that go beyond the glycemic control and again in addition to weight loss. We're also seeing a greater reduction in blood pressure. I've always wondered with the blood pressure Improvement if it's because of if you go back to what we talked about earlier. Remember when you block sglt2, you're preventing the kidney from reabsorbing not just glucose but sodium so,
18:29
As a patient is excreting more glucose and sodium in their urine, you would think they have obviously less sodium within their plasma that may explain the benefits. We see on the blood pressure front as well. I guess maybe just to round this out neck. There are as I said four of these drugs that are approved the three others and you'll have to bear with me for whatever reason. I just have a complete brain thing that does not work when it comes to pronouncing the syllables in proximity of these things, but you have dapa
18:59
Dap Igloo Cliff flows in and paga flows in and kerr to get flows in as the other three and they were approved anywhere from 2013 2014 actually up until the most recent one in 2017. If I'm not mistaken, why is it that drugs have such confusing names like that? Why do they purposely try and make it where any human can't pronounce it?
19:29
Yeah, it's actually a great point and it's a very deliberate point the reason that if you're a drug company and you're developing a drug, you really like it when it has an awful awful name is that the generic name the molecule name is free for anybody to use. So when the drug goes off patent anybody can sell that drug, but it's the trade name. So for example for and paga flows in its Guardians, that's way easier to remember
19:59
So if you're the company that's making that you want everybody to Forever. Remember Jardine's you want people to remember Crest or not reserve a Statin you want them to remember Lipitor not a torva Statin. So it's just classic farm machinery, which is let's make sure that doctors and patients alike are associating the brand name with it and presumably there's some belief that that translates to a longer tail of sales. Anyway, I
20:29
could be speculating on all of that. But that's sort of my two cents. The next follow-up here is something you hinted at earlier, which is what do we know about other effects for sglt2 is outside of just the glycemic control. Yeah. I think this is where things do get a little bit interesting because we've talked about metformin. I think people are already familiar with the idea that okay metformin is kind of like bread and butter early intervention type 2 diabetes, but that's not really the reason people are excited about it. People are excited about meant for
20:59
People talk about in people ask me about it because the belief is that it's doing something Beyond regulating blood sugar and I think to a lesser extent in the Public's eye, but probably to a greater extent in the scientific eye. The excitement is the same for sglt2 Inhibitors. That's interesting isn't it? Right? The public is way more interested about metformin. I think the scientific Community sees much more promise than sglt2 Inhibitors at least on average and that's based on my very unofficial survey of this.
21:29
Why is that one of the things is that the ITP the interventions testing program has found a clear difference between them will talk about that in a second. I'm sure but the other one is just looking at the really clear differences in human clinical trials for the advantages associated with sglt2 Inhibitors in terms of major adverse cardiac events, what are called mace so if you look at people with or without is the big Point without tea
21:59
2D sglt2 Inhibitors have been shown to decrease the risk of hospitalization and death for heart failure patients with reduced ejection fraction and improve basically all cardiovascular outcomes in patients with heart failure who have preserved EF so you take people who have reduced ejection fraction. So what does that mean? So the heart pumps and we can measure with an ultrasound how much blood comes out of the heart with each pump. So if you're at rest that number might be 40% 50% and if you're under great stress or when you're exercising
22:28
using one of the tools that the body has to increase cardiac output is not just to beat faster but also to beat with greater contractility and get more ejection of blood volume. Well heart failure is basically a condition in which action fraction goes down and when ejection fraction gets low enough twenty percent 15 percent you're in a lot of difficulty and what's been demonstrated and this has been demonstrated repeatedly is that when patients have heart failure with or without reduction in EF outcomes are better if they're taking sglt2 Inhibitors, even if they are not
22:59
Patients with type 2 diabetes again. I think there are lots of potential reasons why we might see that I think it probably has to do with the reduction in blood pressure, but it may have to do with other things as well which we could explore. You also had to that where we're going next there, which is a lot of people when they talk about sglt2 s and a lot of questions we get it's much like metformin. It's not diabetics kind of wondering about metformin. It's people who are interested in the drill protective side of it and it's the same with sglt2.
23:28
T2s. And so I think now would be a good time to just say what do we know about sglt2 s as a potential gyro protective molecule.
23:39
Thank you for listening to today's sneak peek. Am a episode of the drive. If you're interested in hearing the complete version of this am a you'll want to become a premium member. It's extremely important to me to provide all of this content without relying on paid ads to do this. Our work is made entirely possible by our members and in return we
23:59
For exclusive member only content and benefits above and beyond what is available for free. So if you want to take your knowledge of this space to the next level, it's our goal to ensure members get back much more than the price of the subscription premium membership includes several benefits first comprehensive podcast show notes that detail every topic paper person and thing that we discuss in each episode and the word on the street is nobody's show notes rival
24:25
h
24:26
s monthly ass.
24:28
Ask me anything or AMA episodes. These episodes are comprised of detailed responses to subscriber questions typically focus on a single topic and are designed to offer a great deal of clarity and detail on topics of special interest to our members. You'll also get access to the show notes for these episodes, of course third delivery of our premium newsletter, which is put together by our dedicated team of research analyst this newsletter covers a wide range of topics related to longevity and provides much more detail than
24:59
Free Weekly Newsletter fourth access to our private podcast feed that provides you with access to every episode including amas son's the should be able you're listening to now and in your regular podcast feed fifth the qualities and additional member only podcast. We put together that serves as a highlight reel featuring the best excerpts from previous episodes of the drive. This is a great way to catch up on previous episodes without having to go back and listen to each one of them and finally,
25:28
Lee other benefits that are added along the way if you want to learn more and access these member only benefits you can head over to Peter a.t.m. D.com forward slash subscribe. You can also find me on YouTube Instagram and Twitter all with the handle Peter Atia MD. You can also leave us a review on Apple podcasts or whatever podcast player you use this podcast is for General informational purposes only and does not constitute the practice of medicine nursing or other professional health care services including
25:59
The giving of medical advice no doctor-patient relationship is formed the use of this information and the materials link to this podcast is that the users own risk the content on this podcast is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice diagnosis or treatment users should not disregard or delay in obtaining medical advice from any medical condition they have and they should seek the assistance of their Health Care Professionals for any such conditions. Finally. I take all conflicts of interest very
26:28
Seriously for all of my disclosures in the companies I invest in or advise, please visit Peter a.t.m. D.com forward slash about where I keep an up-to-date and active list of all disclosures.
ms