Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone System Blockade in Diabetic Nephropathy. Present Evidences
Abstract
:1. A Brief Historic Report: Discovery and Development of Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone System (RAAS) and Their Blockers
Year | Introduced | ||
---|---|---|---|
1563 | Bartolomeo Eustacchio | “glandulae Renibus incumentes” (adrenal gland) | |
1898 | Tigerstedt and Bergman | renin | |
1939 | Irvine Page | angiotonin or hypertenisin (angiotensin) | |
1953 | Simpson and Tait | “electrocortin” (aldosterone) | |
1957 | Gantt and Dyniewicz | spironolactone | 1960 |
1956 | Leonard T. Skeggs | angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) | |
1965 | Ferreira | bradykinin-potentiating factor (BPF) | |
1970 | Ng and Vane | angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition | |
1975 | Squibb | captopril | 1977 |
1979 | Merck | enalapril | 1981 |
1993 | Takeda-Merck | losartan | 1995 |
1997 | Pfizer | eplerenone | 2002 |
2005 | Novartis-Speedel | aliskiren | 2007 |
2. Use of RAAS Blockade in Diabetic Kidney Disease (DKD): Past and Present Evidences
3. Single RAAS Blockade: Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitor (ACEI) and Angiotensin II Receptor Blocker (ARB) Therapy
3.1. In Patients with Type 1 Diabetes (T1DM)
3.1.1. ACEI Therapy
3.1.2. ARBs Therapy
- In 2009, RASS (Renin Angiotensin System Study) [27] trial was performed in 285 normotensive normoalbuminuric T1DM patients, randomly assigned to receive losartan (100 mg/d) or enalapril (20 mg/d) or placebo and followed for five years. In addition, renal biopsy was performed at the study’s onset and after five years in 90% of the patients. Treatment with either losartan or enalapril had no effect compared to placebo on the fraction of glomerular volume occupied by the mesangium (the primary study end point) or other histologic findings seen in DKD. However, they found benefit on retinopathy progression of both enalapril and losartan as monotherapy over placebo.
- In 2009, DIRECT (Diabetic Retinopathy Candesartan Trials) [28] was performed in 3326 T1DM and 1905 T2DM normoalbuminuric patients, randomly assigned to candesartan (16 to 32 mg/d) or placebo. At a mean follow-up of 4.7 years, there was no difference between the candesartan and placebo groups in either the rate of developing moderately increased albuminuria (6% versus 5% and 16% versus 16% in the prevention and progression arms, respectively) or in the annual rate of increase in urinary albumin excretion. There was an overall trend to less severe retinopathy.
3.2. In Patients with Type 2 Diabetes (T2DM)
3.2.1. In Normoalbuminuric T2DM Patients
3.2.1.1. ACE Inhibitor Therapy
- In 1998, Ravid et al. [31] reported that daily treatment with enalapril compared with placebo reduced the risk of progression to microalbuminuria, decreased urinary albumin levels, and attenuated decline in renal function during 6 years of follow-up in 156 patients with T2DM.
- In the 2004, the BENEDICT (Bergamo Nephrologic Diabetes Complication Trial) study [29], was performed in 1204 normoalbuminuric T2DM patients, randomly assigned to trandolapril (2 mg/d) or placebo. At a follow-up of 3.6 years, trandolapril delayed the onset of microalbuminuria independently of blood pressure.
- In 2007, ADVANCE (The Action in Diabetes and Vascular Disease: Preterax and Diamicron-MR Controlled Evaluation) trial [32,33] was performed in 11,140 patients with T2DM and either normoalbuminura or microalbuminuria, randomly assigned to a fixed combination of perindopril-indapamide or placebo. After a mean of 4.3 years, the combination group present a significant reduction in blood pressure and in the risk of albuminuria progression (the rate of worsening or new onset of moderately increased albuminuria (19.6% versus 23.6%) and severely increased albuminuria). However, no clear effect of the therapy on decline in estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) was observed.
3.2.1.2. ARBs Therapy
3.2.2. In Microalbuminuric T2DM Patients
- In 2001, the IRMA-2 (The Irbesartan in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes and Microalbuminuria Trial) study [35] performed in 590 microalbuminuric T2DM patients, showed that treatment with irbesartan (150–300 mg/d) was associated with a dose-dependent reduction in risk of progression to macroalbuminuria, with an almost three-fold risk reduction with the highest dose (300 mg/d) at two years of follow-up. This effect was independent of the blood pressure-lowering properties of irbesartan.
- In 2007, in the INNOVATION (Incipient to Overt: Angiotensin II Blocker, Telmisartan, Investigation on Type 2 Diabetic Nephropathy) trial [36], telmisartan was associated with a lower transition rate to overt nephropathy than was placebo after one year of follow-up. In this trial, telmisartan also significantly reduced blood pressure levels. However, after adjustment for the difference in blood pressure levels between the placebo and treatment groups, the beneficial effect of telmisartan in delaying progression to overt nephropathy persisted.
3.2.3. In Macroalbuminuric/Proteinuric T2DM Patients
3.2.3.1. ARBs Therapy
- In 2001, RENAAL (The Reduction of Endpoints in NIDDM with the Angiotensin II Antagonist Losartan Study) trial [12] was performed in 1513 T2DM patients with nephropathy (urine protein/creatinine ≥300 mg/g and a serum creatinine level of 1.3 to 3 mg/dL), randomly assigned to losartan (50–100 mg/d) or placebo. At 3.4 years, losartan reduced the incidence of a doubling of plasma creatinine by 25% and ESRD by 28%, and losartan reduced albuminuria by 28%, while the placebo was associated with a 4% increase in albuminuria, in the first six months. With post hoc analysis [37], albuminuria reduction by one-half was associated with a 36% decreased risk for the renal endpoint and 45% lower risk for the development of ESRD at follow-up and also showed that the incidence of ESRD was higher in Hispanic and Asian patients than in white and black patients and the losartan group has significant reductions in the development of and subsequent hospitalization for heart failure [38], neither study initially found significant cardiovascular mortality reduction. Benefits of losartan (with regard to prevention of the doubling of creatinine, ESRD, and death) were substantially greater among participants with higher level of baseline urine albumin/creatinine ratio (ACR). Greater baseline albuminuria, greater albuminuria six months after treatment, and lesser reduction in albuminuria from baseline to six months were each strongly associated with the primary composite end point of doubling of serum creatinine, ESRD, or death.
- In 2005, IDNT (Irbesartan Diabetic Nephropathy Trial) [11,39] study was performed in 1715 hypertensive T2DM patients with nephropathy (proteinuria ≥900 mg and a creatinine level of 1 to 3 mg/dL), randomly assigned to irbesartan (300 mg/d), amlodipine (10 mg/d), or placebo. At 2.6 years, irbesartan was associated with a risk of the primary endpoint (doubling of the plasma creatinine, development of ERSD, or death from any cause) that was 23% lower than amlodipine and 20% lower than placebo. A post-hoc analysis reported significantly lower levels of proteinuria were obtained with irbesartan (41% average decrease) than with amlodipine (11%) or control (16%) at one year. In addition, for the same proportional reduction in protein excretion, the risk reduction for renal failure was significantly greater for irbesartan compared with amlodipine. However the post hoc analysis of this trial showed that the risk of cardiovascular deaths for systolic blood pressure (SBP) less than 120 mmHg and DBP less than 85 mmHg was increased because of the high risk of all-cause mortality and myocardial infarction [40,41,42].
- In 2011, ORIENT (Olmesartan Reducing Incidence of End-stage Renal Disease in Diabetic Nephropathy Trial) trial [43], was performed in 577 Japanese and Chinese patients with T2DM and nephropathy, randomly assigned to olmesartan or placebo. At a mean follow-up of 3.2 years, olmesartan did not reduce the risk of the composite renal outcome (doubling of serum creatinine concentration, ESRD or death). However, 77% of the ORIENT study population was receiving ACEI therapy at baseline and this therapy was continued throughout the trial period. Thus, in the majority of participants, the effect of olmesartan added to ACEI therapy was tested rather than the effect of the ARB alone. This difference might explain the lack of renoprotection observed in this trial as opposed to in previous trials that used ACEI or ARB monotherapy. Moreover, an increased risk of cardiovascular events and hyperkalemia (9.2% vs. 5.3%) was observed in the olmesartan group.
3.2.3.2. ACEI Therapy
- In 2004, DETAIL trial [44] was performed in 250 patients with nephropathy (82% moderately increased albuminuria and 18% severely increased albuminuria to a maximum of 1.4 g/d) and a baseline GFR of approximately 93 mL/min per 1.73 m2, randomly assigned to enalapril or telmisartan. At five years, there was a not significant decline in GFR in the enalapril group (14.9 versus 17.9 mL/min per 1.73 m2 with telmisartan). Both groups had similar rates or findings for the secondary endpoints (annual changes in the GFR, blood pressure, serum creatinine, urinary albumin excretion, end-stage kidney disease, cardiovascular events, and mortality).
3.3. In Patients with T1DM and T2DM
- In 2012, a meta-analysis by Hirst [45] of 49 randomized controlled trials involving 19,159 patients, analyzed the benefit of RAAS blockade according to the type of diabetes and the baseline albumin. In T1DM, RAAS blockade reduced urinary albumin excretion in patients with microalbuminuria, but not in those with normoalbuminuria. In T2DM, RAAS blockade reduced urinary albumin excretion in both groups of patients, with and without microalbuminuria.
- In 2012, another meta-analysis published by Nakao [46] of 19 randomized controlled trials (including post hoc analyses) involving 41,042 patients, reviewed whether RAAS blockade is beneficial for cardiovascular outcomes in patients with diabetes mellitus. RAAS blockade significantly reduced the risk of major cardiovascular events and myocardial infarction and there was no statistically significant trending towards fewer strokes and lower all-cause mortality.
4. Dual RAAS Blockade
4.1. Dual RAAS Blockade with ACEI and ARB
- Any single RAAS inhibitor does not completely block every step of the RAAS cascade. Greater down-regulation of the RAAS, as a whole, might be a consequence of RAAS blockade at different levels. In that order, potential lower doses of individual RAAS inhibitors could results in diminished adverse effects [50].
- The “Aldosterone escape” was observed in many patients treated with a single RAAS blockade. Aldosterone baseline levels increased within 6–12 months in 30%–40% of the patients [51].
- During chronic ACEI therapy, the increase of angiotensin I levels can be converted to angiotensin II, this leads to further generation of aldosterone: adding an ARB could counteract the effects of the residual angiotensin II.
- During chronic ARB therapy, angiotensin II levels are elevated in addition to renin and angiotensin I, which can lead to angiotensin II competing with the ARB for the angiotensin II type 1 receptor, and angiotensin II binding to angiotensin II type 2 receptors on the adrenal glands, leading to the secretion of aldosterone [52].
- Finally, plasma potassium increases due to both the ACEIs and the ARBs [50].
- Many patients with macroalbuminuria despite being treated with single RAAS blockade presents “residual albuminuria”, setting a higher risk for the evolution of a chronic kidney disease, cardiovascular disease, and death [37,53]. Observations support the theory that reducing albuminuria will reduce the risk of long-term clinical outcomes, such as ESRD and death. Addition a second RAAS inhibitor may improve long-term outcome in DKD [50].
- There are other drugs that reduce albuminuria but do not improve long-term renal and cardiovascular outcomes.
- Diabetic nephropathy can progress in the absence of albuminuria, suggesting that other tissue-destructive pathways might also have a role in the decline in renal function [5].
- This uncertainty is reflected by the US FDA’s reluctance to accept albuminuria reduction as an end point for approving new therapies and leaves the optimal clinical response to residual albuminuria unclear [50].
- In 2000, Mogensen and colleagues [57] published the CALM (Candesartan and Lisinopril Microalbuminuria) study, performed in 199 hypertensive, T2DM and microalbuminuric patients. After 12 weeks of treatment, the combination of submaximal doses of lisinopril (20 mg), and candesartan (16 mg) led to a 50% reduction in albuminuria as compared with monotherapy in maximal doses, leading to a reduction of 24% and 39%, respectively. Dual therapy resulted in ~9–11 mmHg and 5–6 mmHg reduction in systolic and diastolic BPs, over monotherapy.
- In 2003, Jakobsen and colleagues [55], in 24 patients with T1DM and DKD, demonstrated a further 25% reduction in albuminuria when adding irbesartan (300 mg/d) during eight weeks compared with placebo on top of enalapril (40 mg/d). Four patients experienced transient hypotension during the dual blockade period.
- In 2007, IMPROVE (The Irbesartan in the Management of Proteinuric Patients at High Risk for Vascular Events) study [58], a randomized controlled trial in 405 patients with T2DM, hypertension, and albuminuria, failed to show a significant effect of combination therapy with ramipril and irbesartan (using maximal doses) on albuminuria as compared with monotherapy. However, there was no statistical difference in occurrence of adverse events, and hyperkalemia occurred in approximately 2.5% of patients in both groups.
- In 2008, Kunz and colleagues [59] published a meta-analysis of the effect of ACEI/ARB combination treatment on proteinuria: Over 1–4 months follow-up, analyzing seven clinical trials of ACEI plus ARB versus placebo plus ARB, the addition of an ACEI-reduced albuminuria by 24%; and analyzing seven clinical trials of ARB plus ACEI versus placebo plus ACEI, the addition of an ARB reduced albuminuria by 22%. The authors concluded that dual RAAS blockade seemed more effective in reducing proteinuria than either class of agent alone, but they also concluded that many of the smaller studies did not provide reliable data on adverse events, limiting the clinical applicability of the concept at that time.
- In 2008, the ONTARGET (Ongoing Telmisartan Alone and in combination with Ramipril Global Endpoint) trial [61,62] was performed in 25,620 patients older than 55 years with established cardiovascular disease (including 9603 patients with T2DM) and compare combination ramipril (10 mg/d) and telmisartan (80 mg/d) therapy with ramipril alone. In the subset of 3163 patients with DKD, combination therapy was associated with a similar death rate (2.3% versus 2.2%) and higher rates of acute kidney injury requiring dialysis (1.4% versus 0.8%), hyperkalemia (11.3% versus 7.8%), hypotension (2.8% versus 1.9%) and diarrhea. They conclude “…The combination of the two drugs was associated with more adverse events without an increase in benefit…”.
- In 2013, the VA NEPHRON-D (Veterans Affairs Nephropathy in Diabetes) trial [63], was performed in 1448 mostly male T2DM patients with DKD (macroalbuminuria and moderate-to-severe renal impairment (eGFR 30–90 mL/min/1.73m2) and compare combination losartan (100 mg/d) and lisinopril (10 to 40 mg/d) therapy with losartan alone. It must be discontinued after a median of 2.2 years because of a significantly higher frequency of acute kidney injury requiring hospitalization (18% versus 11%) or severe hyperkalemia (9.9% versus 4.4%). They conclude “…the results of our study show that the use of combination therapy with an ACE inhibitor and an ARB in patients with proteinuric diabetic kidney disease is associated with an increased risk of adverse events and does not provide an overall clinical benefit…”.
4.2. Dual RAAS Blockade with ACEI/ARB and Direct Renin Inhibitor (DRI)
- In 2008, AVOID (Aliskiren in the Evaluation of Proteinuria in Diabetes) trial [66], performed in 599 T2DM patients with hypertension and nephropathy (macroalbuminuria), randomly assigned to aliskiren (300 mg/d) or aliskiren plus losartan (100 mg/d). At 24 weeks of follow-up, combination therapy was associated with a significant 20% greater reduction in proteinuria and with a slight BP advantage but with no significant difference in the rate of decline in eGFR. Aliskiren therapy was associated with a significant increase in the risk of hyperkalemia.
- In 2012, ALTITUDE (Aliskiren Trial in Type 2 Diabetes Using Cardiorenal Endpoints) trial [67], performed in 8561 T2DM patients selected based on their high renal and cardiovascular risk profile, all receiving an ACEIs or ARBs at baseline, randomly assigned to aliskiren (300 mg/d) or placebo. After a median follow-up of 32.9 months, the incidence of kidney or cardiovascular events was similar with aliskiren and placebo (6% versus 5.9%) and adverse events requiring cessation of therapy (worsening of renal function, hyperkalemia, hypotension and diarrhea) were significantly more frequent (13.2% versus 10.2%) in the aliskiren group.
- In 2012, Harel and colleagues [68] published a meta-analysis of adverse events seen in studies of combination of aliskiren and other blockers of the RAAS. The authors analyzed data from 10 randomized controlled trials with 4814 patients and found a higher risk of hyperkalemia (relative risk 1.58, 95% confidence interval CI 1.24–2.02).
- In 2013, the VIVID study [69], performed in 1143 hypertensive patients with T2DM and Stage 1 to 2 CKD, using the combination of aliskiren/valsartan vs. valsartan monotherapy assessed blood pressure control. After two months combination therapy yielded significantly better blood pressure lowering. Safety events were similar in both groups, with no increased incidence of hyperkalemia in the combination therapy group.
4.3. Dual RAAS Blockade with ACEI/ARB and Mineralocorticoid Receptor Antagonists (MRAs)
- In 2006, the only long-term study performed to date of add-on spironolactone therapy in diabetic and nondiabetic patients with proteinuria showed that the agent induced an initial acute fall in eGFR that predicted a later beneficial effect on decline in renal function and a remarkable and sustained reduction in proteinuria [75].
- In 2008, effects on albuminuria were summarized in a systematic review [71]. Fourteen studies evaluated spironolactone, whereas one study evaluated eplerenone. These MRAs were added to an ACEI in the majority of studies, although some studies added MRAs to an ARB or to an ACEI and an ARB (triple RAAS blockade). Compared with placebo or no additional intervention, most studies reported that addition of an MRA reduced albuminuria by 30%–40% (range, 15%–54%) but hyperkalemia is a concern particularly as renal function deteriorates. Currently treatment with this combination is not being recommended.
- In 2009, Medhi and colleagues published a placebo-controlled trial [74] performed in 81 patients with T1DM or T2DM, hypertension, and albuminuria ≥300 mg/g, all receiving high doses of lisinopril (80 mg/d) at baseline, randomly assigned to spironolactone (25 mg/d), losartan (100 mg/d), or placebo. At 48 weeks of follow-up, patients treated with spironolactone had a 34% decrease in urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio compared to placebo while patients who received losartan had only a 17% decrease not significantly different from placebo, despite a similar effect on blood pressure and serum potassium levels. A direct statistical comparison of spironolactone versus losartan was not reported.
- In 2006, Epstein and colleagues examined the efficacy and safety of eplerenone in a trial [76] of 268 patients with T2DM and CKD stage 1–2 (eGFR 74 mL/min per 1.73 m2), already treated with an ACEI randomly assigned to eplerenone (50 or 100 mg/d) or placebo. Patients treated with eplerenone therapy present a significant reduction in albuminuria (40%–50% versus <10%). Severe hyperkalemia (>6 meq/L) occurred in 9% and 23% of patients receiving 50 and 100 mg/d of eplerenone, respectively, compared with 12% of patients in the placebo group.
- In 2014, a meta-analysis of eight trials and 404 patients [77], combined treatment ACEI/ARB and MRA further reduced albuminuria by 23 to 61%, increased hyperkalemia prevalence and slightly decreased eGFR values, compared with standard treatment.
5. Combination ACEI/ARB and Calcium Channel Blockers
- In a study [80] of 30 patients with T2DM in which lisinopril (mean dose 29 mg/d) or verapamil (mean dose 360 mg/d) alone lowered protein excretion from 5.8 to 2.7 g/d. Low-dose combination of both drugs (mean of 16 mg of lisinopril and 187 mg of verapamil) had a much greater antiproteinuric effect (down from 6.8 to 1.7 g/d) but was also associated with fewer drug-induced side effects (such as constipation with verapamil and dizziness with lisinopril).
- A similar antiproteinuric effect has been demonstrated with combination therapy with verapamil and trandolapril [83]. But their potential efficacy in the preservation of renal function in relation to ACEIs has not yet been evaluated in humans.
6. Combination ACE Inhibitor/ARB and Salt Restriction
- High sodium intake has been found to blunt the antiproteinuric as well as the antihypertensive response to ACE inhibition, in albuminuric patients.
- Moderate salt restriction to 5–6 g/d (recommended by KDIGO 2012 Clinical Practice Guideline for the Evaluation and Management of CKD [48]) has been found to enhance the antihypertensive and antiproteinuric effects of RAAS blockade [85]. Their addition to ACEI was significantly more effective than dual RAAS blockade [86], as effective as the addition of diuretics, even in patients resistant to RAAS blockade [84]. Into the bargain, low-sodium diet improves the long-term cardioprotective and renal efficacy of single RAAS blockade [87]. In a post hoc analysis of the RENAAL and IDNT trials [87], ARB provided the best renoprotective effects in patients who had the lowest tertile of sodium intake: the risk of renal events was reduced by 43% or increased by 37% in patients with the lowest and highest tertile of sodium intake, respectively.
- Extremely aggressive sodium restriction on top of single or dual RAAS blockade might elicit adverse renal and cardiovascular events. A meta-analysis from Italy [88] concluded increased mortality in patients with heart failure on a very strict sodium diet treated with daily diuretics and fluid restriction, but this paper was retracted soon after publication because of concern over reporting of duplicate data and the inability of the authors to provide the original data for verification.
- If a low-sodium diet is not possible, diuretic therapy with increased furosemide dosage partially corrects the loss of antiproteinuric effect due to a high sodium intake, even in nephrotic patients [89].
7. What is and What Should be the Current Use of RAAS Blockade?
Reasons Wielded by Some Clinicians Not to Use RAAS Blockade in DKD Patients | Arguments against Reasons Wielded by some Clinicians for Not Using RAAS Blockade in DKD Patients |
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“Anti-RAAS therapy has no advantage to other therapies” |
|
“Anti-RAAS therapy can accelerate the progression rate of kidney decline” [92] |
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“Intensive blood pressure-lowering is dangerous in diabetic patients” [92] |
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“Anti-RAAS therapy is dangerous in elderly patients” |
|
“Anti-RAAS therapy can induce potential lethal hyperkalemia” [92] |
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“Anti-RAAS therapy not prevent residual risk of ESRD” |
|
8. Conclusions
- All patients with DKD should be started on RAAS blockers.
- It is essential to individualize blood pressure (BP) targets and treatment regimens according to age, coexistent cardiovascular disease, and other comorbidities, risk of progression of CKD, presence or absence of retinopathy, other therapies and tolerance of treatment, with gradual escalation of treatment and close attention to adverse events related to BP treatment, including electrolyte disorders, acute deterioration in kidney function, orthostatic hypotension, and drug side effects.
- There is insufficient evidence to recommend combining an ACE-I with ARBs to prevent progression of CKD.
- Patients with low or moderate risk for progressive kidney disease (normo/microalbuminuria with normal estimated GFR):
- ○
- In normotensive normoalbuminuric T1DM and T2DM patients, RAAS-inhibiting agents for primary prevention is not justified.
- ○
- In normotensive microalbuminuric T1DM and T2DM patients, an ARB or ACEI must be used.
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- In hypertensive microalbuminuric T1DM and T2DM patients, ACEI or ARB monotherapy remains the mainstay of treatment.
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- Due to the lack of evidence supporting a target blood pressure of less than 130/80 mmHg, we recommend a goal of 140/90 mmHg.
- ○
- The use of RAAS blockers and a blood pressure of less than 130/80 mmHg is not of proven value for slowing CKD progression.
- ○
- Dual RAAS blockade should not be routinely applied.
- Patients at high risk (macroalbuminuria or impaired GFR):
- ○
- All patients should be treated on RAAS blockers especially those with advanced Stage 3 or higher CKD.
- ○
- Hypertensive T1DM and T2DM patients must be treated with BP-lowering drugs to maintain a lower blood pressure of less than 130/80 mmHg especially those with more than 1 g of proteinuria and advanced Stage 3 or higher CKD.
- ○
- Maintaining anti-RAAS therapy for its secondary stroke prevention and antiproteinuric effects must always remain a consideration.
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- It is recommended that temporary discontinuation of RAAS blockers in patients with GFR <60 mL/min/1.73 m2 who have serious intercurrent illness (particularly in a setting of dehydration such as diarrhoea and vomiting) that increases the risk of acute kidney failure.
- ○
- Clinicians should carefully weigh the potential benefits of dual RAAS blockade against potential adverse effects including hyperkalemia on an individual basis.
- Very hypertensive patient (>160/100 mmHg), excluded from ONTARGET trial, requiring multi-agent therapy (including ACEI/ARB in combination), where CVD risk is directly correlated with BP, any BP lowering would be expected to translate to a significant reduction in CVD-related morbidity and mortality. In a case control study [114] of 600 patients, it has been found that there is no excess decline in renal function in the very hypertensive patient (>160/100 mmHg) treated with combination of ACEI and ARB in comparison to monotherapy. This suggests the primacy of BP control in preserving renal function over any potential decline afforded by combination therapy in this very hypertensive at-risk group.
- Some of the ONTARGET patients were using therapies proven to have beneficial effects on vascular risk (such as β-blockers, statin, and anti-platelet treatment), attenuating any additional benefit from combination ACEI/ARB therapy. However, in clinical practice, many patients do not or cannot take statin treatment and cannot use β-blockers or anti-platelet agents. It is theoretically possible that a greater RAAS blockade would be beneficial in this subgroup of patients who cannot have risk attenuated by other pharmacological means.
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Lozano-Maneiro, L.; Puente-García, A. Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone System Blockade in Diabetic Nephropathy. Present Evidences. J. Clin. Med. 2015, 4, 1908-1937. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm4111908
Lozano-Maneiro L, Puente-García A. Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone System Blockade in Diabetic Nephropathy. Present Evidences. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2015; 4(11):1908-1937. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm4111908
Chicago/Turabian StyleLozano-Maneiro, Luz, and Adriana Puente-García. 2015. "Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone System Blockade in Diabetic Nephropathy. Present Evidences" Journal of Clinical Medicine 4, no. 11: 1908-1937. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm4111908
APA StyleLozano-Maneiro, L., & Puente-García, A. (2015). Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone System Blockade in Diabetic Nephropathy. Present Evidences. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 4(11), 1908-1937. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm4111908