Post-authorization safety study to assess the risk of diabetic ketoacidosis among type 2 diabetes mellitus patients treated with ertugliflozin compared to patients treated with other antihyperglycaemic agents in a Medicare and Medicaid population.

Rai, A., Marshall, J., Nandyala, S., Her, M., Agan, A. A., Huang, T.-Y., Rodriguez-Watson, C., Clary, A., Diessner, B., Nolan, M. B., Djibo, D. A., DeVries, A., Daniels, K., Zhang, X., Wang, T., Gantz, I., Shankar, R., Zale, M. M., Ejelonu, P., … Toh, S. (2026). Post-authorization safety study to assess the risk of diabetic ketoacidosis among type 2 diabetes mellitus patients treated with ertugliflozin compared to patients treated with other antihyperglycaemic agents in a Medicare and Medicaid population.. Diabetic Medicine : A Journal of the British Diabetic Association, 43(4), e70208.

Abstract

AIMS: To evaluate diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) risk among new users of ertugliflozin versus sulfonylureas (SU) or thiazolidinediones (TZD) and incretin-based drugs in patients with type 2 diabetes.

METHODS: We used Medicare and Medicaid fee-for-service adjudicated claims within the Innovation in Medical Evidence and Development Surveillance network to identify three new-user cohorts: (1) ertugliflozin; (2) SU/TZD; and (3) incretin-based drugs. The outcome was a principal hospital discharge diagnosis for DKA. Adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) were estimated after 1:1 propensity score (PS) matching, separately for ertugliflozin vs. SU/TZD and vs. incretin-based drugs. Subgroup analyses were performed based on baseline insulin use.

RESULTS: After PS matching, baseline characteristics were similarly distributed in each cohort. For ertugliflozin (n = 42,907) vs. SU/TZD (n = 42,907), the incidence rates of DKA per 1000 person-years (PY) were 2.95 and 1.49, respectively. For ertugliflozin (n = 42,247) vs. incretin-based drugs (n = 42,247), the incidence rates of DKA per 1000 PY were 2.76 and 1.06, respectively. For ertugliflozin vs. SU/TZD, the HR [95% confidence interval (CI)] was 1.88 [1.17-3.02]; in non-insulin users, 2.34 [1.27-4.31]; and in insulin users, 1.17 [0.54-2.52]. For ertugliflozin vs. incretin-based drugs, the HR [95% CI] was 2.40 [1.40-4.11]; in non-insulin users, 2.84 [1.42-5.66]; and in insulin users, 1.87 [0.79-4.46].

CONCLUSIONS: Ertugliflozin was associated with a higher risk of DKA relative to comparators. HRs were higher among new users with no-concomitant insulin use than those with concomitant insulin use. Results were consistent with prior SGLT2i data and highlighted the importance of caution by both patients and physicians.

Last updated on 04/02/2026
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