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From barriers to implementing evidence-based care to innovations in combination therapy, here are 5 key updates from the annual meeting.
Counting down the biggest news from major medical meetings, it's the HCPLive Five!
Heart in Diabetes (HiD) is a medical conference bringing together world-renowned clinical leaders in diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Designed to evaluate state-of-the-art clinical data and research while focusing on the management of the heart and kidneys in diabetes, the meeting’s goal is to align cardiologists, endocrinologists, diabetologists, hepatologists, nephrologists, and all other interested clinicians in their understanding and development of appropriate comprehensive clinical management plans for high-risk patients.
As part of HCPLive’s on-site coverage, the editorial team conducted expert interviews and reported on timely topics across implementation science, cardiometabolic health, combination therapy, and more. In this edition of the HCPLive Five, the team highlights key conversations on barriers to evidence-based cardiometabolic care, recognizing obesity as a chronic disease, data on cardiovascular disease trends, the CONFIDENCE trial of combined finerenone plus empagliflozin in patients with both chronic kidney disease (CKD) and type 2 diabetes, and data accessibility issues in an era of unprecedented technological innovation.
While innovation in cardiovascular, kidney, and metabolic care often centers around emerging therapies, the underuse of established, evidence-based treatments in clinical practice remains a major and under-discussed challenge. In this interview with HCPLive at HiD, Neha Pagidipati, MD, MPH, an assistant professor of medicine and cardiovascular disease prevention specialist at Duke University School of Medicine, reviews different barriers to implementing guideline-directed medical therapy as well as facilitators and potential avenues for improvement moving forward.
Given the limitations surrounding BMI measurement of obesity, a recent Lancet Commission aimed to better define obesity as a condition of illness that comes as a direct result of excess adiposity and its effect on the function of tissues and organs. In this interview with HCPLive at HiD, Timothy Garvey, MD, breaks down some of the key points from the paper and how they will influence the treatment of obesity and its complications moving forward.
Despite decades of progress and innovation in cardiovascular care, recent data from the American Heart Association (AHA) suggest that the momentum has stalled—and in some cases, reversed. At HiD, Seth Martin, MD, MHS, a professor of medicine in the division of cardiology at Johns Hopkins Hospital and co-founder at Corrie Health, offered a data-driven overview of the current state of cardiovascular disease (CVD) in the United States and globally, based on the AHA’s 2024 statistical update. In this interview with HCPLive, he reviews key trends and calls for urgent action to improve implementation of prevention and treatment strategies at scale.
In this episode of Don’t Miss a Beat, hosts Muthiah Vaduganathan, MD, MPH, a cardiologist and codirector of the Center for Cardiometabolic Implementation Science at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and Steve Greene, MD, an advanced heart failure specialist at Duke University School of Medicine, review key findings and clinical implications of the CONFIDENCE trial. The data, which were also presented at the 62nd European Renal Association (ERA 2025) Congress in Vienna, Austria, suggest the potential benefits of combination initial therapy with finerenone plus empagliflozin in patients with both CKD and type 2 diabetes.
In this interview with HCPLive, Robert Califf, MD, an instructor of medicine at Duke University School of Medicine and former commissioner of the US Food and Drug Administration, provided his perspective on the ongoing difficulties in implementation of digital technologies and preventative measures for cardiovascular diseases and diabetes. He points to shortcomings of the cardiology field and the medical industry at large in adapting technological advances to practical, clinical usability, citing the high number of new programs and mechanisms for tracking individual risk factors and their failure to collate this data meaningfully for patients.
These 5 represent only some of the data the HCPLive team covered at this year's meeting! Check out more KOL insight and our full conference coverage on our Heart in Diabetes page.
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