City
Epaper

Study shows diabetes drug may reduce heart failure risk in cancer patients by 50 pc

By IANS | Updated: March 6, 2025 17:46 IST

New Delhi, March 6 A common type of diabetes medication may help cancer patients ward off the risk ...

Open in App

New Delhi, March 6 A common type of diabetes medication may help cancer patients ward off the risk of heart failure by 50 per cent and boost long-term recovery, according to new research on Thursday.

Heart failure is common among cancer patients, and can lead to a reduced quality of life, multiple admissions to hospital, or even death. It is caused both due to the deadly disease as well as because of chemotherapy -- the first line of cancer treatment.

Researchers from the University of East Anglia in the UK showed that a type of diabetes medication -- an SGLT2 inhibitor -- may help protect the heart during and after cancer treatment.

The study, published in the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology, showed SGLT2 inhibitors can lower the risk of heart failure and unplanned hospital visits related to heart failure by more than 50 per cent.

The benefits were found to be particularly promising for breast cancer patients receiving a common chemotherapy type called anthracycline chemotherapy, which can affect heart health, said the team.

"Chemotherapy has played an instrumental role in improving patient outcomes. But up to 20 per cent of cancer patients who have had chemotherapy go on to develop heart problems, with up to 10 per cent having heart failure,” said lead researcher Prof Vassilios Vassiliou, from the University.

"We know that SGLT2 inhibitors are recognised for their cardiovascular benefits. They can improve the symptoms of heart failure such as breathlessness and tiredness, and also reduce people's risk of becoming frail," Vassiliou added.

To see whether SGLT2 inhibitors could help protect the heart during and after cancer treatment, the team analysed 13 studies with a total of 88,273 cancer patients and survivors.

The team found that hospital admissions for heart failure were reduced by half. The number of new heart failure cases appeared to fall by more than two-thirds (71 per cent), suggesting these pills might help protect the heart during and after cancer treatment.

However, the researchers noted that more research is needed to confirm the findings.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalKing Charles strips brother Andrew's 'prince' title, orders him to vacate mansion amid Epstein links

InternationalCentrists win big in Netherlands election, Rob Jetten can be youngest Dutch PM

Cricket"They were 30 runs short": Jemimah Rodrigues following India's historic run chase against Australia in Women's CWC semi-final

Cricket"I won't be there": Australian skipper Alyssa Healy on chances of playing in next ODI CWC after semi-final defeat against India

Cricket"I just stood there and god fought for me, can't take credit...": Jemimah after memorable ton for India against Australia in WC semifinal

Health Realted Stories

HealthK'taka Guv Thawarchand Gehlot hospitalised; CM Siddaramiah wishes him speedy recovery

HealthFitness Tips: Why Women Gain Belly Fat and How to Reduce It Naturally

HealthRising infections from lesser-known bacterium, says PGI Chandigarh

HealthKerala: Medical college doctors threaten indefinite strike over govt apathy

Health129 more test positive for dengue in Manipur, case tally rises to 3,594 this year