Updated
Updated · DocWire News · Jun 5
Study Links DCCBs to 33% Higher Kidney Event Risk in 31,031 DKD Patients
Updated
Updated · DocWire News · Jun 5

Study Links DCCBs to 33% Higher Kidney Event Risk in 31,031 DKD Patients

3 articles · Updated · DocWire News · Jun 5

Summary

  • 31,031 adults with type 2 diabetes and diabetic kidney disease showed a 33% higher risk of major adverse kidney events when treated with dihydropyridine calcium-channel blockers, researchers reported at the 2026 ERA Congress.
  • 39.2% of the cohort received DCCBs on top of renin-angiotensin system inhibitors and SGLT2 inhibitors, and the elevated risk persisted over a median 3.5-year follow-up despite those standard kidney-protective therapies.
  • Major adverse kidney events were defined as at least a 40% decline in estimated glomerular filtration rate or progression to end-stage kidney disease.
  • Investigators said DCCBs may raise intraglomerular pressure by dilating vessels entering the kidney's filtering units more than those carrying blood away, potentially sustaining kidney injury.
  • Because the study was observational and cannot prove causation, the authors called for randomized trials to determine the best blood-pressure treatment strategy for DKD patients.

Insights

Is a common blood pressure pill secretly worsening kidney disease in diabetic patients?
Will new research force a major rethink of blood pressure drugs for diabetes?