Expert consensus recommendations from a Kuwaiti multidisciplinary group on managing cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic (CKM) syndrome using GLP-1 RAs in a country with among the world's highest CKM disease burdens. Integrates AHA CKM syndrome framework with local prescribing guidance for semaglutide and other GLP-1 RAs across cardiometabolic risk stages. Provides the first Gulf-region expert consensus for GLP-1 RA-based CKM syndrome management—translating global evidence from SELECT, FLOW, and STEP trials to a high-prevalence population with unique healthcare system characteristics.
Abstract
Obesity, type 2 diabetes (T2D), cardiovascular disease (CVD), and chronic kidney disease (CKD) are overlapping conditions that drive premature morbidity and mortality worldwide. Care remains siloed and reactive despite shared risk factors and strong evidence for early intervention. To support integrated disease management, the American Heart Association (AHA) recently introduced the concept of cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic (CKM) syndrome, recognizing the bidirectional links between metabolic, kidney, and cardiovascular health. Kuwait faces one of the highest burdens of CKM-related diseases globally. Three-quarters of adults are overweight or have obesity, and 28% have diabetes, both of which are leading causes of mortality and health system strain. Yet multidisciplinary care remains limited, and innovative pharmacotherapies, including glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs), are underused. A panel of Kuwaiti endocrinologists, cardiologists, and nephrologists convened to assess barriers to optimal CKM care and define practical recommendations. Discussions focused on current gaps in screening, care coordination, provider education, and access to therapies. Evidence on GLP-1 RAs was reviewed, considering the demonstrated benefits for weight loss, glycemic control, cardiovascular outcomes, and CKD progression. The expert group agreed that multidisciplinary, risk-stratified, and patient-centered approaches are urgently needed. Recommendations include earlier screening and diagnosis, improved integration across specialties, healthcare provider upskilling, public awareness campaigns, and broader access to GLP-1 RAs. Semaglutide was highlighted as a clinically valuable option owing to its broad efficacy and safety profile. Adopting a CKM care model tailored to Kuwait's specific challenges, with appropriate use of GLP-1 RAs, can reduce disease burden, improve outcomes, and increase healthcare system efficiency. The local implementation of evidence-based, cross-specialty strategies is key to altering the trajectory of CKM syndrome in high-risk populations.
Authors
Aldahi, Waleed A; Alenezi, Abdullah; Alessa, Thamer; Alhamdan, Rashed; Al-Humood, Khaldoon A; Alqallaf, Ahmed; Alotaibi, Torki; Alrajab, Heba; Alshammari, Abdulmuhsen M; Alyousef, Anas M; Alsayed Hashem, Asrar; Rizzo, Manfredi