Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6164831 | Kidney International | 2013 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Vasopressin V2-receptor antagonists may delay disease progression in ADPKD. Trials with V2-receptor antagonists have been performed predominantly in patients with an estimated creatinine clearance of 60Â ml/min or more. Here we determined renal hemodynamic effects of the V2-receptor antagonist tolvaptan in 27 patients with ADPKD at various stages of chronic kidney disease: group A: >60, group B: 30-60, and group C: <30Â ml/min per 1.73Â m2. Measurements were performed before, after 3 weeks of tolvaptan (up titration to 90/30Â mg/day, split dose), and 3 weeks after the last dose of tolvaptan. With tolvaptan, a minor, reversible decrease in GFR (125I-iothalamate clearance) was found that reached significance in groups A and B: -7.8 (interquartile range -13.7 to -1.3) and -4.3 (-9.7 to -0.9) ml/min per 1.73Â m2, respectively, but not in group C (GFR decrease -0.7 (-1.1 to 1.5) ml/min/1.73Â m2). The percentage change in GFR, ERPF (131I-hippuran clearance), and filtration fraction with tolvaptan did not differ between the three study groups. No differences between the three study groups were found in other main efficacy variables, besides smaller increases in urine volume in group C during tolvaptan treatment. Tolvaptan was well tolerated, with only two patients withdrawing. Thus, doses of tolvaptan typically used in patients with ADPKD do not produce a difference in renal hemodynamic profile in chronic kidney disease stages 1 through 4, but minor GFR drops may be observed in individual patients.
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Authors
Wendy E. Boertien, Esther Meijer, Paul E. de Jong, Stephan J.L. Bakker, Frank S. Czerwiec, Joachim Struck, Dorothee Oberdhan, Susan E. Shoaf, Holly B. Krasa, Ron T. Gansevoort,