Douglas Kevin, O'Malley Patrick G, Jackson Jeffrey L
Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC 20307, USA.
Ann Intern Med. 2006 Jul 18;145(2):117-24. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-145-2-200607180-00009.
Albuminuria is an independent risk factor for cardiovascular and renal disease with limited therapeutic options. Data on the effects of statins on albuminuria are conflicting.
To determine whether and to what degree statins affect albuminuria.
English-language and non-English-language studies found in PubMed, MEDLINE, EMBASE, BIOSIS, SciSearch, PASCAL, and International Pharmaceutical Abstracts (IPA) databases and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials that were published between January 1974 and November 2005.
Randomized, placebo-controlled trials of statins reporting baseline and follow-up measurements of albuminuria or proteinuria measured by 24-hour urine collection or the urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio.
Two investigators independently abstracted study quality, characteristics, and outcomes.
Fifteen studies involving a total of 1384 patients and averaging 24 weeks in duration were included. Meta-analysis of the proportional reduction in proteinuria showed that statins reduced albuminuria (11 studies) and proteinuria (4 studies) in 13 of 15 studies. The reduction in excretion was greater among studies with greater baseline albuminuria or proteinuria: change of 2% (95% CI, -32% to 35%) for those with excretion less than 30 mg/d, -48% (CI, -71% to -25%) for those with excretion of 30 to 300 mg/d, and -47% (CI, -67% to -26%) for those with excretion more than 300 mg/d. Statistical heterogeneity was evident only in the group with excretion greater than 300 mg/d (excretion < 30 mg/d, I2 = 23% [P = 0.27]; excretion of 30 to 299 mg/d, I2 = 0% [P = 0.64]; excretion > or = 300 mg/d, I2 = 63% [P = 0.020]).
Published studies were not of high quality on average and varied markedly in effect size, as well as in characteristics of the cohorts. Unpublished studies showing no effect could impact these results.
Statins may have a beneficial effect on pathologic albuminuria. The validity of this finding, and whether this effect translates into reduction of cardiovascular or end-stage renal disease, requires larger studies.
蛋白尿是心血管疾病和肾脏疾病的独立危险因素,而治疗选择有限。关于他汀类药物对蛋白尿影响的数据存在矛盾。
确定他汀类药物是否以及在何种程度上影响蛋白尿。
1974年1月至2005年11月期间在PubMed、MEDLINE、EMBASE、BIOSIS、SciSearch、PASCAL和国际药学文摘(IPA)数据库以及Cochrane对照试验中央注册库中检索到的英文和非英文研究。
他汀类药物的随机、安慰剂对照试验,报告通过24小时尿液收集或尿白蛋白与肌酐比值测量的蛋白尿或蛋白尿的基线和随访测量值。
两名研究人员独立提取研究质量、特征和结果。
纳入了15项研究,共涉及1384例患者,平均持续时间为24周。蛋白尿比例降低的荟萃分析表明,在15项研究中的13项中,他汀类药物可降低蛋白尿(11项研究)和蛋白尿(4项研究)。基线蛋白尿或蛋白尿较高的研究中排泄量的降低更大:排泄量小于30mg/d的患者变化为2%(95%CI,-32%至35%),排泄量为30至300mg/d的患者变化为-48%(CI,-71%至-25%),排泄量大于300mg/d的患者变化为-47%(CI,-67%至-26%)。仅在排泄量大于300mg/d的组中存在明显的统计学异质性(排泄量<30mg/d,I2 = 23%[P = 0.27];排泄量为30至299mg/d,I2 = 0%[P = 0.64];排泄量≥300mg/d,I2 = 63%[P = 0.020])。
已发表的研究平均质量不高,效应大小以及队列特征差异明显。未发表的显示无效应的研究可能会影响这些结果。
他汀类药物可能对病理性蛋白尿有有益作用。这一发现的有效性以及这种效应是否转化为心血管疾病或终末期肾病的减少,需要更大规模的研究。