The FLOW trial results are in and they represent a paradigm shift for diabetic kidney disease. I wanted to break down the key findings for this community.
FLOW enrolled 3,533 patients with T2DM and CKD (eGFR 25-75 mL/min/1.73m² with UACR 300-5000 mg/g). Semaglutide 1.0 mg weekly vs. placebo on top of standard of care (including maximum tolerated RAS blockade).[1]
Primary composite endpoint (onset of kidney failure, ≥50% eGFR decline, renal death, or CV death):
"Semaglutide reduced the primary composite endpoint by 24% (HR 0.76; 95% CI, 0.66–0.88; P=0.0003). The trial was stopped early for efficacy at a pre-planned interim analysis."
Key secondary findings:
| Endpoint | HR (95% CI) | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| Primary composite | 0.76 (0.66–0.88) | 24% reduction |
| Kidney-specific composite | 0.79 (0.66–0.94) | 21% reduction |
| eGFR slope (mL/min/yr) | -1.16 vs -2.19 | 47% slower decline |
| UACR reduction (%) | ~-26% vs placebo | Significant albuminuria reduction |
| All-cause mortality | 0.80 (0.67–0.95) | 20% reduction |
The trial was stopped early — after a median of approximately 3.4 years — because the Data Monitoring Committee determined that the benefit had crossed the pre-specified efficacy boundary.
This places semaglutide alongside SGLT2 inhibitors and finerenone as foundational therapy for diabetic kidney disease.
[1] Perkovic V, Tuttle KR, Rossing P, et al. Effects of Semaglutide on Chronic Kidney Disease in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes (FLOW). N Engl J Med. 2024;391(2):109-121. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa2403347