The first step in treating diabetic nephropathy is to treat and control diabetes and high blood pressure. Treatment includes diet, lifestyle changes, exercise and prescription medicines. Controlling blood sugar and blood pressure might prevent or delay kidney issues and other complications.
Medications
In the early stages of diabetic nephropathy, your treatment might include medicines to manage the following:
- Blood pressure. Medicines called angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors and angiotensin 2 receptor blockers (ARBs) are used to treat high blood pressure.
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Blood sugar. Medicines can help control high blood sugar in people with diabetic nephropathy. They include older diabetes medicines such as insulin. Newer drugs include Metformin (Fortamet, Glumetza, others), glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists and SGLT2 inhibitors.
Ask your health care professional if treatments such as SGLT2 inhibitors or GLP-1 receptor agonists might work for you. These treatments can protect the heart and kidneys from damage due to diabetes.
- High cholesterol. Cholesterol-lowering drugs called statins are used to treat high cholesterol and lower the amount of protein in urine.
- Kidney scarring. Finerenone (Kerendia) might help reduce tissue scarring in diabetic nephropathy. Research has shown that the medicine might lower the risk of kidney failure. It also may lower the risk of dying from heart disease, having heart attacks and needing to go to a hospital to treat heart failure in adults with chronic kidney disease linked to type 2 diabetes.
If you take these medicines, you'll need regular follow-up testing. The testing is done to see if your kidney disease is stable or getting worse.
Treatment for advanced diabetic nephropathy
For kidney failure, also called end-stage kidney disease, treatment focuses on either replacing the work of your kidneys or making you more comfortable. Options include:
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Kidney dialysis. This treatment removes waste products and extra fluid from the blood. Hemodialysis filters blood outside the body using a machine that does the work of the kidneys. For hemodialysis, you might need to visit a dialysis center about three times a week. Or you might have dialysis done at home by a trained caregiver. Each session takes 3 to 5 hours.
Peritoneal dialysis uses the inner lining of the abdomen, called the peritoneum, to filter waste. A cleansing fluid flows through a tube to the peritoneum. This treatment can be done at home or at work. But not everyone can use this method of dialysis.
- Transplant. Sometimes, a kidney transplant or a kidney-pancreas transplant is the best treatment choice for kidney failure. If you and your health care team decide on a transplant, you'll be assessed to find out if you can have the surgery.
- Symptom management. If you have kidney failure and you don't want dialysis or a kidney transplant, you'll likely live only a few months. Treatment may help keep you comfortable.
Potential future treatments
In the future, people with diabetic nephropathy may benefit from treatments being developed using techniques that help the body repair itself, called regenerative medicine. These techniques may help reverse or slow kidney damage.
For example, some researchers think that if a person's diabetes can be cured by a future treatment such as pancreas islet cell transplant or stem cell therapy, the kidneys might work better. These therapies, as well as new medicines, are still being studied.