Latest Articles
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Editorial Review
Once-Weekly Insulin: A Breakthrough in Diabetes Management or an Unresolved Challenge?
The advent of once-weekly insulin icodec is a promising development in the care of individuals with diabetes. These once-weekly formulations aimed to improve patient adherence and quality of life for patients who find daily injection administration challenging. Insulin icodec has demonstrated comparable glycemic control to conventionally used daily basal insulins, such as insulin glargine and degludec, in the ONWARDS clinical trials. ⋯ Moreover, logistical hurdles, including production costs and supply chain complexities need to be addressed especially in low-resource settings. Future studies should evaluate the broader health impacts of weekly insulin, including cardiovascular outcomes, quality of life, and personalized dosing strategies. Making weekly insulin safe, affordable, and widely available is important to fully realize its potential in diabetes management.
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The contribution of health care to environmental and climate crises is significant, under-addressed, and with consequences for human health. This editorial is a call to action. Focusing on pharmaceuticals as a major environmental threat, we examine pharmaceutical impacts across their lifecycle, summarising greenhouse gas emissions, pollution, and biodiversity loss, and outlining challenges and opportunities to reduce this impact. We urge health care decision-makers and providers to urgently consider environmental factors in their decision-making relating to both policy, and practice, promoting actions such as rational prescribing, non-pharmaceutical interventions, and research and advocacy for sustainable production, procurement, and use.
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Editorial
Finerenone: Do We Really Need an Additional Therapy in Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus and Kidney Disease?
Patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) face considerable cardiorenal morbidity and mortality despite existing therapies. Recent clinical trials demonstrate the efficacy of finerenone, a novel non-steroidal mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist, in reducing adverse renal and cardiovascular outcomes. This editorial briefly reviews the evidence and its implications for clinical practice, advocating the use of finerenone in these high-risk patients in combination with currently established treatment agents.