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A Store For Life
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Save Your Kidneys—Part 1
From the McDougall
Newsletter, June 2007
by John McDougall, MD
The Hard Way, with Medications
(This is a technical article, but very important to anyone with kidney
disease or taking any of the anti-angiotensin medications—ACE-I or ARB.)
The prevalence of chronic kidney disease in the US adult population
is estimated to be 10.8% (approximately 19.2 million people). In 1999 in
the USA 357,000 people had end-stage kidney disease and the annual cost
of dialysis and kidney transplant exceeded $15.6 billion. Almost 70% of
new cases of end-stage kidney disease are due to hypertension, diabetes
or glomerulonephritis—and these common conditions are in most cases a
direct result of foods consumed on the Western diet.
Protein found in the urine in amounts of 30 mg/day or greater, is the
hallmark sign for the beginnings of chronic kidney disease. Over 300
mg/day is considered serious kidney disease. In general, the more
protein in the urine, the worse the kidney disease. Not only does the
protein in the urine reflect the health of the kidneys, but this is a
reliable sign of the health of the rest of the body, including the blood
vessels of the heart, brain, and eyes. Lowering the amount of protein in
the urine in some cases reflects an improvement in the kidneys and a
person’s overall health.
Medications to Prevent Progressive Kidney Disease
There are four classes of medications that are believed to slow the
progression of kidney disease: antihypertensive agents, drugs that have
a blockade effect on the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system,
cholesterol-lowering agents (usually statins), and blood-sugar lowering
medications.
Common recommendations are to reduce the blood pressure levels to
130/85 mmHg for people with high blood pressure and kidney disease from
diabetes. However, blood pressures of 140/90 mmHg may be low enough and
lowering the blood pressure too much is considered detrimental.1 For
example, in one recent study of patients with coronary heart disease
treated with sustained-release verapamil (a calcium channel blocker) or
atenolol to lower blood pressure, the risk of death and heart attack was
increased when the diastolic pressure (the lower number) was reduced
below 70 to 80 mm Hg.2 The harmful effects of lowering blood pressure
were greater for people with diabetes and/or elevated cholesterol. The
incidence of heart attacks, death, and/or stroke was three times higher
for patients treated with medications with a diastolic blood pressure
(the lower number) of 60 mmHg compared to a person with a pressure of 80
to 90 mmHg.2 (A lower blood pressure for people not on medication is, in
contrast, healthy.)
Recommendations are to lower cholesterol levels with statins to below
150 mg/dl and LDL cholesterol below 77 mg/dl.3 Decreases in blood sugars
over the long-term (as measured by Hgb A1c levels) have also been shown
to slow kidney disease in people with type-1 diabetes.
Renal Protective Anti-Angiotensin Drugs
Medications used to slow the progression of kidney disease are
referred to as “renal-protective” (or renoprotective) and the most
popular of these are a class of blood pressure lowering medications
which inhibit the activity of an adrenal hormone called angiotensin. (I
will refer to these as anti-angiotensin medications.)
These medications fall into two general classes: The kinds that block
the production of angiotensin by the adrenal gland are known as
angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACE-I) and those that block
the activity of this hormone at the places where it works in the body
(the receptor sites) are called angiotensin receptor blockers (ARB).
Research has found the more severe the kidney damage, as reflected by a
larger amount of protein in the patient’s urine, the greater the
benefits from these medications.
| Two
Categories of Anti-angiotensin Medications |
| ACE-I: Accupril (quinapril), Aceon (perindopril),
Altace (ramipril), Capoten (Captopril), Lotensin (benazepril),
Mavik (trandolapril), Monopril (fosinopril), Prinivil (lisinopril),
Univasc (moexipril), Vasotec (enalapril), Zestril (lisinopril)
ARB: Cozaar (losartan), Atacand
(candesartan), Teveten (eprosartan), Avapro (irbesartan),
Micardis (telmisartan), Benicar (olmesartan), Hyzaar (losartan)
and Diovan (valsartan). |
Disease Mongering with Proteinuria
The bulk of the research on the medications that modify
the effects of angiotensin is funded by the pharmaceutical companies, so
the real truths about the benefits of these drugs are hard to know for
certain. The amount of protein in the patient’s urine (proteinuria) is
the “end point” most often measured to determine a drug’s benefit.
However, the “end points” most meaningful to the patient are staying
alive, healthy, and off a dialysis machine. Research has clearly
established that these medications will decrease the amount of protein
in the urine, but their benefits for improved health are seriously
questioned.
An example of the lack of a direct connection between
reducing proteinuria with medication and a patient’s improved health is
the diabetic medication Avandia. (Avandia is also known as rosiglitazone.)
Rosiglitazone combined with metformin has been proven to provide a
greater reduction in proteinuria than other oral antidiabetic
combinations.4 Yet, the New England Journal of Medicine on June 2007
published the results of diabetics taking rosiglitazone—they found a 43%
increased risk of a heart attack and a 64% increased risk of death from
all cardiovascular causes.5 Thus, diabetic patients using Avandia will
be more likely to die, but they will die with less protein in their
urine.
Renal-protective Effects of Anti-Angiotensin Drugs
Questioned
A study recently published in the Lancet concluded,
“…claims that ACE inhibitors and ARBs are renoprotective in diabetes
seem to derive from small placebo-controlled trials that provide
uncertain evidence of the existence of any true advantage over and above
blood-pressure control… There seems to be little justification for ACE
inhibitors or ARBs to be first-line choices for renoprotection in
diabetes on the basis of efficacy, and residual uncertainty still exists
about the inherent value of these drugs in other renal disorders. In
view of the present analysis, treatment decisions for hypertension in
renal disease should be based on the blood-pressure-lowering effect,
comparative tolerability, and cost of antihypertensive treatment.”6
Not only may these two categories of anti-angiotensin
medications (ACE-I and ARB) have no special benefits, they may actually
be more harmful than other antihypertensive medications. There is good
evidence from one very large study that ACE-I drugs result in a higher
risk of stroke and cardiovascular disease (like heart failure and heart
surgery) when compared to the use of inexpensive diuretics (chlorthalidone)
for the treatment of hypertension.7
|
ARB Increase the Risk
of Stroke and Heart Disease 8 |
| The VALUE trial showed the
angiotensin receptor blocker valsartan produced a
statistically significant 19% relative increase in
myocardial infarction (fatal and non-fatal) compared with
amlodipine and a 13% increase in the incidence of stroke in
patients taking valsartan.
The CHARM-alternative trial showed
a significant 36% increase in myocardial infarction with
candesartan (versus placebo) despite a reduction in blood
pressure (4.4 mm Hg systolic and 3.9 mm Hg diastolic) vs.
placebo treatment.
The SCOPE study, candesartan was
associated with a non-significant 10% increase in fatal plus
non-fatal myocardial infarction despite lower blood pressure
(3.2 mm Hg systolic and 1.6 mm Hg diastolic) for candesartan
vs. placebo. |
Patients with Diabetes without Proteinuria
A common practice by almost all doctors these days
is to treat all diabetics, with or without hypertension, with ACE-I
and/or ARB drugs, even when they have no protein in their urine. The
highly respected Cochrane review of diabetic patients, many with
hypertension, but no protein in their urine, found the future
development of protein in the urine was reduced by ACE-I
medications, but this had no effect on progression of kidney disease
or risk of death.9 Another recent review of the current evidence
concluded: “Until more evidence accumulates on the alleged
renoprotection associated with RAS inhibition (inhibition of the
renin-angiotensin system), it seems reasonable for clinicians to not
use pharmacologic intervention with ACE inhibitors or ARBs in
normotensive patients with diabetes. For hypertensive patients with
diabetes, prescribing a thiazide diuretic would also seem to
represent the practice of evidence-based medicine.”10 In addition,
patients with kidney disease from causes other than diabetes with
low levels of protein in their urine (500 mg/day or less) have not
been shown to benefit from ACE-I or ARB medications.11
What To Do?
Kidney disease is a serious problem and people with
diabetes are at especially high risk of losing the function of their
kidneys. Treating high blood pressure, cholesterol, and blood sugar
with medications will be of some benefit. However, these medications
are associated with serious side effects and financial costs. ACE-I
and ARB medications are highly profitable for the pharmaceutical
industry and as a result they have spent billions of dollars for
research that favors their products and marketing to their sales
division, the medical doctors. As discussed above, the real benefits
for the patient of using these medications, over less expensive
ones, are in doubt. Based on available research, a diuretic, such as
chlorthalidone, would be the drug of first choice for treating
hypertension in patients with kidney disease. People with diabetes
and no protein in their urine should not routinely receive so-called
“renal-protective” medications in the form of ACE-I or ARB. In
addition, people with kidney disease from non-diabetic causes and no
protein in their urine should not take these medications for
“renal-protection.” For people with diabetes and significant kidney
disease, given a choice between use of an ACE-I and ARB, the ACE-I
are more effective with fewer risks that the ARB.12
Hypertension, elevated cholesterol, and type-2
diabetes are due to the Western diet. Likewise, the health of the
heart, kidneys, arteries, and the rest of the body is dependent on a
healthy diet. What is missing in the current treatment of people
with kidney disease is diet-therapy. For almost seventy years
doctors have been aware of the profound effect that a healthy diet
has on preserving kidney function, and even reversing some of the
kidney damage.
Next month’s newsletter will continue with a
discussion of the most effective form of renal-protection: a
healthy, cost-free, low-protein vegan diet. (to be posted soon)
References:
1) Garcia-Donaire JA, Segura J, Ruilope LM. Clinical
trials in nephrology: success or failure. Curr Opin Nephrol
Hypertens. 2007 Mar;16(2):59-63.
2) Messerli FH, Mancia G, Conti CR, Hewkin AC,
Kupfer S, Champion A, Kolloch R, Benetos A, Pepine CJ. Dogma
disputed: can aggressively lowering blood pressure in hypertensive
patients with coronary artery disease be dangerous? Ann Intern Med.
2006 Jun 20;144(12):884-93.
3) Crespin SR. What does the future hold for
diabetic dyslipidaemia? Acta Diabetol. 2001;38 Suppl 1:S21-6.)
4) Bakris G, Ruilope LM, McMorn S, et al.
Rosiglitazone reduces microalbuminuria and blood pressure
independently of glycemia in type 2 diabetes patients with
microalbuminuria. J Hypertens 2006; 24:2047–2055.
5) Nissen SE, Wolski K. Effect of rosiglitazone on
the risk of myocardial infarction and death from cardiovascular
causes. N Engl J Med. 2007 Jun 14;356(24):2457-71.)
6) Casas JP, Chua W, Loukogeorgakis S, et al. Effect
of inhibitors of the reninangiotensin system and other
antihypertensive drugs on renal outcomes: systematic review and
meta-analysis. Lancet. 2005;366:2026-33.
7) The ALLHAT Officers and Coordinators for the
ALLHAT Collaborative Research Group. The Antihypertensive and
Lipid-Lowering Treatment to Prevent Heart Attack Trial: major
outcomes in high-risk hypertensive patients randomized to
angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor or calcium channel blocker
vs diuretic: the Antihypertensive and Lipid-Lowering Treatment to
Prevent Heart Attack Trial (ALLHAT). JAMA. 2002;288:2981-97.)
8) Verma S, Strauss M. Angiotensin receptor blockers
and myocardial infarction.
BMJ. 2004 Nov 27;329(7477):1248-9.
9) Strippoli GF, Craig M, Craig JC. Antihypertensive
agents for preventing diabetic kidney disease. Cochrane Database
Syst Rev. 2005 Oct 19;(4):CD004136.
10) Curtiss FR. What evidence supports guidelines
for use of ACE inhibitors and ARBs in diabetes? J Manag Care Pharm.
2006 Oct;12(8):690-1.
11) Jafar TH, Schmid CH, Landa M, Giatras I, Toto R,
Remuzzi G, Maschio G, Brenner BM, Kamper A, Zucchelli P, Becker G,
et al. Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors and progression of
nondiabetic renal disease. A meta-analysis of patient-level data.
Ann Intern Med. 2001 Jul 17;135(2):73-87.
12) Strippoli GF, Craig MC, Schena FP, Craig JC.
Role of blood pressure targets and specific antihypertensive agents
used to prevent diabetic nephropathy and delay its progression. J Am
Soc Nephrol. 2006 Apr;17(4 Suppl 2):S153-5.
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