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Optimal nephroprotection: use, misuse and misconceptions about blockade of the renin-angiotensin system. Lessons from the ONTARGET and other recent trials.

Diabetes & Metabolism 2009 December
Results from the ONTARGET trial remind us that acute haemodynamically mediated renal dysfunction, triggered by low arterial pressure or volume depletion, can occur in high-risk cardiovascular patients (who usually have some degree of diseased intrarenal vessels) treated with renin-angiotensin system (RAS) blockers (especially in combination). However, nephroprotection could not be properly assessed in the trial, as the population was at low renal risk. Although albuminuria remains a useful marker in many patients, it can neither predict acute renal dysfunction nor replace end-stage renal disease (ESRD) as the endpoint in clinical trials. Recent trials using surrogate endpoints suggest that some RAS blockers (ACE inhibitors, angiotensin receptor blockers, the renin inhibitor aliskiren) may be more nephroprotective than others, but proving this requires comparing them (alone or in combination) in populations with identified renal disease (mainly diabetic nephropathy) and the use of hard endpoints. RAS-blocker dosages are critical: as some patients need much larger doses to decrease proteinuria than do others, the efficacy of a high-dose RAS blocker needs to be assessed in patients with persistent proteinuria. In patients with massive proteinuria despite maximum RAS-blocker dosages, combination RAS blockade should be considered by nephrologists, but will require close monitoring of renal function; also, the treatment needs to be withdrawn (at least temporarily) as soon as volume depletion or excessively low arterial pressure arises. In recent trials, lowering blood pressure towards values recommended by the current guidelines (130/80mmHg) has reduced microvascular (lower levels of urinary albumin excretion) and macrovascular events in diabetic patients.

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