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Proteinuria and cholesterol reduction are independently associated with less renal function decline in statin-treated patients; a post hoc analysis of the PLANET trials.
Idzerda, NMA, Pena, MJ, Parving, HH, de Zeeuw, D, Heerspink, HJL
Nephrology, dialysis, transplantation : official publication of the European Dialysis and Transplant Association - European Renal Association. 2019;(10):1699-1706
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Abstract
BACKGROUND Statins have shown multiple effects on different renal risk factors such as lowering of total cholesterol (TC) and lowering of urine protein:creatinine ratio (UPCR). We assessed whether these effects of statins vary between individuals, the extent of discordance of treatment effects on both TC and UPCR within an individual, and the association of responses in TC and UPCR with estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) decline. METHODS The PLANET I and II (Renal effects of Rosuvastatin and Atorvastatin in Patients Who Have Progressive Renal Disease) trials examined effects of atorvastatin and rosuvastatin on proteinuria and renal function in patients with proteinuria. We post hoc analysed 471 therapy-adherent proteinuric patients from the two trials and assessed the individual variability in UPCR and TC response from 0 to 14 weeks and whether these responses were predictive of eGFR decline during the subsequent 9 months of follow-up. RESULTS UPCR and TC response varied between individuals: mean UPCR response was -1.3% (5th-95th percentile -59.9 to 141.8) and mean TC response was -93.9 mg/dL (-169.1 to -26.9). Out of 471 patients, 123 (26.1%) showed a response in UPCR but not in TC, and 96 (20.4%) showed a response in TC but not in UPCR. eGFR (mL/min/1.73 m2) did not decrease significantly from baseline in both UPCR responders [0.4; 95% confidence interval (CI) -1.6 to 0.9; P = 0.54] and TC responders (0.3; 95% CI -1.8 to 1.1; P = 0.64), whereas UPCR and TC non-responders showed a significant decline in eGFR from baseline (1.8; 95% CI 0.6-3.0; P = 0.004 and 1.7; 95% CI 0.5-2.9; P = 0.007, respectively). A lack of response in both parameters resulted in the fastest rate of eGFR decline (2.1; 95% CI 0.5-3.7; P = 0.01). These findings were not different for rosuvastatin or atorvastatin. CONCLUSIONS Statin-induced changes in cholesterol and proteinuria vary between individuals and do not run in parallel within an individual. The initial fall in cholesterol and proteinuria is independently associated with a reduction in eGFR decline. This highlights the importance of monitoring both cholesterol and proteinuria after initiating statin therapy.
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Effect of Ramipril on Urinary Protein Excretion in Maintenance Renal Transplant Patients Converted to Sirolimus.
Mandelbrot, DA, Alberú, J, Barama, A, Marder, BA, Silva, HT, Flechner, SM, Flynn, A, Healy, C, Li, H, Tortorici, MA, et al
American journal of transplantation : official journal of the American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons. 2015;(12):3174-84
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Abstract
This prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study evaluated the effects of ramipril on urinary protein excretion in renal transplant patients treated with sirolimus following conversion from a calcineurin inhibitor. Patients received ramipril or placebo for up to 6 weeks before conversion and 52 weeks thereafter. Doses were increased if patients developed proteinuria (urinary protein/creatinine ratio ≥0.5); losartan was given as rescue therapy for persistent proteinuria. The primary end point was time to losartan initiation. Of 295 patients randomized, 264 met the criteria for sirolimus conversion (ramipril, 138; placebo, 126). At 52 weeks, the cumulative rate of losartan initiation was significantly lower with ramipril (6.2%) versus placebo (23.2%) (p < 0.001). No significant differences were observed between ramipril and placebo for change in glomerular filtration rate from baseline (p = 0.148) or in the number of patients with biopsy-confirmed acute rejection (13 vs. 5, respectively; p = 0.073). One patient in the placebo group died due to cerebrovascular accident. Treatment-emergent adverse events were consistent with the known safety profile of sirolimus and were not potentiated by ramipril co-administration. Ramipril was effective in reducing the incidence of proteinuria for up to 1 year following conversion to sirolimus in maintenance renal transplant patients.
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[Multi-center randomized control study on the effects of syndrome differentiated traditional Chinese medicine therapy on CKD 1-2 with chronic nephritis proteinuria].
Wu, F, Zhang, PQ, Wang, XQ, Nie, LF, Fu, XJ, Peng, W, Wang, Y, Li, J, Bi, YP, Mi, XH, et al
Sichuan da xue xue bao. Yi xue ban = Journal of Sichuan University. Medical science edition. 2015;(1):145-8
Abstract
OBJECTIVE To determine the effects of Syndrome Differentiated Chinese Medicine (TCM) Therapy on (CKD) 1-2 stage chronic kidney disease with proteinuria. METHODS A prospective randomized control study was undertaken in 11 centers. A total of 396 chronic nephritis patients were divided into a treatment group (n=297) and a control group (n=99). Their TCM syndrome was classified as "Qi and Yin Deficiency of spleen and kidney" or "Qi and Yang Deficiency of spleen and kidney", with accompanying syndromes showing as "water and dampness", "damp-heat", and "blood stasis". Patients in the treatment group took a dose of Chinese medicine daily in response to their syndromes, while the controls took 50 mg/d losartan. The course of treatment was 24 weeks. Changes of 24-hour urinary protein excretion and glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) before and after treatments (4, 8, 12, 16, 20, 24 weeks), as well as clinical efficacy (after 4, 16, 24 weeks treatments) were measured. RESULTS 361 patients were included in the final program participants comply analysis (PPS). Patients in the treatment group showed gradual decreased 24-hour urinary protein excretion, whereas the controls remained unchanged. Significant differences in 24-hour urinary protein excretion appeared between the experimental and control group at week 20 and 24 (P<0.05). eGFR decreased in all of the patients after treatments (P=0.0014). At three follow-up points, patients in the treatment group had higher eGFR than the controls, but without statistical significance (P>0.05). Significant differences in clinical remission rate, marked effect rate and total effective rate were observed between the treatment and control groups at week 24 (P<0.001). CONCLUSION Syndrome differentiated TCM therapy can reduce the level of proteinuria in CKD 1-2 nephritis patients, promoting clinical effectiveness and protecting renal functions.
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Metabolic syndrome, proteinuria, and the risk of progressive CKD in hypertensive African Americans.
Lea, J, Cheek, D, Thornley-Brown, D, Appel, L, Agodoa, L, Contreras, G, Gassman, J, Lash, J, Miller, ER, Randall, O, et al
American journal of kidney diseases : the official journal of the National Kidney Foundation. 2008;(5):732-40
Abstract
BACKGROUND Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is more likely to progress to kidney failure (end-stage renal disease) in African Americans, although the reasons for this are unclear. Metabolic syndrome is a risk factor for the development of diabetes and cardiovascular disease and recently was linked to incident CKD. The purpose of this study is to examine whether metabolic syndrome is associated with kidney disease progression in hypertensive African Americans. DESIGN & PARTICIPANTS The current study design is a secondary analysis of the African-American Study of Hypertension and Kidney Disease, a randomized controlled trial of blood pressure goal and agents in hypertensive African Americans with CKD. PREDICTORS Metabolic syndrome was defined according to the modified National Cholesterol Education Program guidelines. OUTCOMES Decrease in glomerular filtration rate of 50% or 25 mL/min/1.73 m(2), end-stage renal disease (initiation of dialysis therapy or transplantation), death, or a composite outcome of all 3. RESULTS 842 subjects were included in this analysis, and 41.7% met criteria for metabolic syndrome. Subjects meeting criteria for metabolic syndrome had greater levels of proteinuria. Cox regression analyses adjusted for age, sex, glomerular filtration rate, and other significant covariates except for proteinuria indicated a 31% increased risk, with a 95% confidence interval of 1.03 to 1.7 (P = 0.03) for time to reach the composite outcome in those with metabolic syndrome. Adjusting for proteinuria, the effect was abated to 16% (95% confidence interval, 0.9 to 1.5), no longer remained significant (P = 0.2), and was unchanged by adjusting randomized treatment group (blood pressure goal or antihypertensive drug). LIMITATIONS Lack of waist circumference as a better surrogate of abdominal obesity. CONCLUSIONS In summary, metabolic syndrome is associated with proteinuria in hypertensive African Americans, but is not independently associated with CKD progression.
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A pilot study to test the effect of pulsatile insulin infusion on cardiovascular mechanisms that might contribute to attenuation of renal compromise in type 1 diabetes mellitus patients with proteinuria.
Weinrauch, LA, Burger, AJ, Aepfelbacher, F, Lee, AT, Gleason, RE, D'Elia, JA
Metabolism: clinical and experimental. 2007;(11):1453-7
Abstract
We hypothesized that correction of insulin deficiency by pulsatile intravenous insulin infusion in type 1 diabetes mellitus patients with nephropathy preserves renal function by mechanisms involving cardiac autonomic function, cardiac mass, or efficiency, or by hemostatic mechanisms. The control group (8 patients) received subcutaneous insulin (3-4 injections per day). The intravenous infusion group (10 patients) received three 1-hour courses of pulsed intravenous insulin infusion on a single day per week in addition to subcutaneous insulin. Laboratory measurements included 2-dimensional Doppler echocardiography, 24-hour ambulatory monitoring with heart rate variation analysis, platelet aggregation and adhesion, plasma fibrinogen, factor VII, von Willebrand factor, fibrinolytic activity, plasminogen activator inhibitor, and viscosity measured at baseline and 12 months. Blood pressure control was maintained preferentially with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors. Ratio of carbon dioxide production to oxygen utilization was measured with each infusion and showed rapid increase from 0.8 to 0.9 (P = .005) at weekly treatments through 12 months. We observed an annualized decrease in creatinine clearance of 9.6 mL/min for controls vs 3.0 mL/min for infusion patients. Annualized fall in blood hemoglobin was 1.9 vs 0.8 g/dL, respectively (P = .013). There were no differences between the control and infusion group with respect to glycohemoglobin, advanced glycated end products, cholesterol, or triglycerides. No differences between the study groups for hemodynamic or hemostatic factors were evident. Blood pressures were not significantly different at baseline or 12 months. We conclude that although preservation of renal function with attenuation of loss of blood hemoglobin during 12 months of intravenous insulin infusion was associated with improvement in the efficiency of fuel oxidation as measured by respiratory quotient, this occurred without differences in metabolic/hemostatic factors, cardiac autonomic function, cardiac wall, or chamber size. Our hypothesis that preservation of renal function in type 1 diabetes mellitus patients with proteinuria by weekly pulsed insulin infusion involves mechanisms from the autonomic nervous system, cardiac size, and function, or elements of hemostasis was not confirmed.
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Antiproteinuric effect of the calcium channel blocker cilnidipine added to renin-angiotensin inhibition in hypertensive patients with chronic renal disease.
Fujita, T, Ando, K, Nishimura, H, Ideura, T, Yasuda, G, Isshiki, M, Takahashi, K, ,
Kidney international. 2007;(12):1543-9
Abstract
Cilnidipine, a dual L-/N-type calcium channel blocker, dilates both efferent and afferent arterioles and is renoprotective. Our multi-center, open-labeled, and randomized trial compared the antiproteinuric effect of cilnidipine with that of amlodipine in hypertensive patients with kidney disease. A group of 339 patients, already receiving renin-angiotensin system inhibitor treatment, were randomly assigned to cilnidipine or amlodipine. The primary endpoint was a decrease in the urinary protein to creatinine ratio. After 1-year of treatment, systolic and diastolic blood pressures were significantly reduced in both groups which did not differ between them. The urinary protein to creatinine ratio significantly decreased in the cilnidipine compared to the amlodipine group. Cilnidipine exerted a greater antiproteinuric effect than amlodipine even in the subgroup whose blood pressure fell below the target level. This study suggests that cilnidipine is superior to amlodipine in preventing the progression of proteinuria in hypertensive patients when coupled with a renin-angiotensin system inhibitor.
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Antiproteinuric effect of candesartan cilexetil in Japanese subjects with type 2 diabetes and nephropathy.
Haneda, M, Kikkawa, R, Sakai, H, Kawamori, R, ,
Diabetes research and clinical practice. 2004;(1):87-95
Abstract
The effect of the angiotensin II receptor blocker, candesartan cilexetil, on proteinuria was examined in a prospective, multicenter, randomized, double-blind study in Japanese subjects with type 2 diabetes. This study enrolled diabetic subjects with confirmed proteinuria into four groups for 12 weeks of treatment with placebo or candesartan cilexetil 2, 4, or 8 mg. The contribution of the angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) gene polymorphism to the effect of candesartan cilexetil was also examined. In 127 subjects, candesartan cilexetil showed a dose-related reduction in proteinuria after 12 weeks of treatment (F = 9.45, P = 0.0013), with a 18.1% reduction in the 4-mg group, and a 5.8% reduction in the 8-mg group, in contrast to a 32.2% increase in the placebo group, and a 0.8% increase in the 2-mg group. These results indicate that candesartan cilexetil is useful in reducing proteinuria in diabetic subjects when compared with placebo. In addition, candesartan cilexetil seems to be effective in subjects with both the II and DD genotypes of the ACE gene.
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Antihypertensive and antiproteinuric efficacy of ramipril in children with chronic renal failure.
Wühl, E, Mehls, O, Schaefer, F, ,
Kidney international. 2004;(2):768-76
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BACKGROUND While the antihypertensive and renoprotective potency of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors is well-established in adults with hypertension and/or chronic renal failure, little experience exists in pediatric chronic kidney disease. METHODS As part of a prospective assessment of the renoprotective efficacy of ACE inhibition and intensified blood pressure (BP) control, 397 children (ages 3 to 18 years) with chronic renal failure [CRF; glomerular filtration rate (GFR) 11 to 80 mL/min/1.73 m2] and elevated or high-normal BP received ramipril (6 mg/m2) following a 6-month run-in period including a two-month washout of any previous ACE inhibitors. Drug efficacy was assessed by two monthly office BP and proteinuria assessments, and by ambulatory BP monitoring at start and after 6 months of treatment. RESULTS In the 352 patients completing six months of treatment, 24-hour mean arterial pressure (MAP) had decreased by a mean of 11.5 mm Hg (-2.2 SDS) in initially hypertensive subjects, but only by 4.4 mm Hg (-0.8 SDS) in patients with initially normal BP. A linear correlation was found between MAP at baseline and the change of MAP during treatment (r= 0.51; P < 0.0001). The antihypertensive response was independent of changes in concomitant antihypertensive medication or underlying renal disease. BP was reduced with equal efficacy during day- and nighttime. Urinary protein excretion was reduced by 50% on average, with similar relative efficacy in patients with hypo/dysplastic nephropathies and glomerulopathies. The magnitude of proteinuria reduction depended on baseline proteinuria (r= 0.32, P < 0.0001), and was correlated with the antihypertensive efficacy of the drug (r= 0.22, P < 0.001). The incidence of rapid rises in serum creatinine and progression to end-stage CRF during treatment did not differ from the pretreatment observation period. Mean serum potassium increased by 0.3 mmol/L. Ramipril was discontinued in three patients due to symptomatic hypotension or hyperkalemia. Hemoglobin levels decreased by 0.6 g/dL in the first two treatment months and remained stable thereafter. CONCLUSION Ramipril appears to be an effective and safe antihypertensive and antiproteinuric agent in children with CRF-associated hypertension. The BP lowering and antiproteinuric effects are greatest in severely hypertensive and proteinuric children.
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The verapamil versus amlodipine in nondiabetic nephropathies treated with trandolapril (VVANNTT) study.
Boero, R, Rollino, C, Massara, C, Berto, IM, Perosa, P, Vagelli, G, Lanfranco, G, Quarello, F
American journal of kidney diseases : the official journal of the National Kidney Foundation. 2003;(1):67-75
Abstract
BACKGROUND We tested whether the combination of verapamil (V) or amlodipine (A) with trandolapril (T) affected proteinuria differently from T alone in patients with nondiabetic nephropathies. METHODS After T, 2 mg, in open conditions for 1 month, 69 patients were randomly assigned to be administered T, 2 mg, combined with V, 180 mg, plus a placebo or T, 2 mg, plus A, 5 mg, once a day in a double-blind fashion. Patients were followed up for 8 months. RESULTS Proteinuria diminished significantly after T treatment from mean protein excretion of 3,078 +/- 244 (SEM) to 2,537 +/- 204 mg/24 h (P = 0.018). In the randomized phase, there was a slight reduction in proteinuria in both groups without significant differences within and between treatments (T + V, protein from 2,335 +/- 233 to 2,124 +/- 247 mg/24 h; T + A, protein from 2,715 +/- 325 to 2,671 +/- 469 mg/24 h). The selectivity index (SI; calculated as the ratio of immunoglobulin G to albumin clearance) was slightly and not significantly reduced in patients treated with T plus V from a median of 0.20 (interquartile range, 0.13) to 0.16 (interquartile range, 0.15; P = not significant), whereas it significantly increased from 0.20 (interquartile range, 0.14) to 0.30 (interquartile range, 0.14; P = 0.0001) in patients treated with T plus A. Modifications in SI and serum creatinine levels at the end of the study from randomization were significantly directly correlated (r = 0.45; P = 0.001). The number of patients reporting adverse effects was significantly higher in the T plus A than T plus V group (63.8% versus 33.3%; P = 0.016). CONCLUSION In patients with nondiabetic proteinuric nephropathies treated with T, the combination of V or A does not significantly increase its antiproteinuric effect.
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Dissociation between blood pressure reduction and fall in proteinuria in primary renal disease: a randomized double-blind trial.
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Journal of hypertension. 2002;(4):729-37
Abstract
OBJECTIVE Guidelines recommend lower threshold and goal blood pressure (BP) for patients with proteinuria. BP reduction could be accompanied by a different fall in proteinuria depending of the antihypertensive drug. The objective was to compare proteinuria reduction when BP is lowered to the same level with different drugs. DESIGN Prospective, randomized, double-blind, controlled trial. SETTING 12 Spanish centres. PATIENTS A total of 119 patients with primary renal disease, blood pressure > 130/85 mmHg, proteinuria > 1 g/day, and creatinine clearance > or = 50 ml/min. INTERVENTION After a 4-week run-in placebo period, patients were randomized to: atenolol 50 mg/day; trandolapril 2 mg/day; verapamil 240 mg/day or verapamil 180 + trandolapril 2 mg/day combination; forced double-dose titration was carried out at the 4th week. Treatment duration was 6 months. OUTCOME MEASURES Changes in BP, 24 h proteinuria, serum albumin and calcium. RESULTS BP was significantly reduced with the four treatments [SBP/DBP (mmHg]: atenolol 12.2/9.9; trandolapril 12.9/9.3; verapamil 8.2/7.9 and verapamil + trandolapril 13.6/11.3) without differences between them. A significant fall in proteinuria was seen in the trandolapril, 40.2% [95% confidence interval (CI) 24.3-56.2%], and verapamil + trandolapril groups, 48.5% (95% CI, 31.7-64.3%) accompanied with increases in serum albumin (trandolapril: from 3.86 +/- 0.64 to 4.03 +/- 0.67 g/dl; verapamil + trandolapril: from 4.15 +/- 0.58 to 4.40 +/- 0.51 g/dl). CONCLUSIONS In patients with proteinuric primary renal disease, adequate dose titration of antihypertensive drugs may provide a substantial BP reduction. Only angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (trandolapril) treatment, alone or better combined with verapamil, reduces proteinuria and increases serum albumin.