Shaw James A, Shetty Partha, Burns Kevin D, Fergusson Dean, Knoll Greg A
Department of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada; Division of Nephrology, Kidney Research Centre, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
PLoS One. 2015 May 20;10(5):e0127439. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0127439. eCollection 2015.
C-peptide has intrinsic biological activity and may be renoprotective. We conducted a systematic review to determine whether C-peptide had a beneficial effect on renal outcomes. MEDLINE, EMBASE, and the Cochrane Central Databases were searched for human and animal studies in which C-peptide was administered and renal endpoints were subsequently measured. We identified 4 human trials involving 74 patients as well as 18 animal studies involving 35 separate experiments with a total of 641 animals. In humans, the renal effects of exogenously delivered C-peptide were only studied in type 1 diabetics with either normal renal function or incipient nephropathy. Pooled analysis showed no difference in GFR (mean difference, -1.36 mL/min/1.73 m2, p = 0.72) in patients receiving C-peptide compared to a control group, but two studies reported a reduction in glomerular hyperfiltration (p<0.05). Reduction in albuminuria was also reported in the C-peptide group (p<0.05). In diabetic rodent models, C-peptide led to a reduction in GFR (mean difference, -0.62 mL/min, p<0.00001) reflecting a partial reduction in glomerular hyperfiltration. C-peptide also reduced proteinuria (mean difference, -186.25 mg/day, p = 0.05), glomerular volume (p<0.00001), and mesangial matrix area (p<0.00001) in diabetic animals without affecting blood pressure or plasma glucose. Most studies were relatively short-term in duration, ranging from 1 hour to 3 months. Human studies of sufficient sample size and duration are needed to determine if the beneficial effects of C-peptide seen in animal models translate into improved long-term clinical outcomes for patients with chronic kidney disease. (PROSPERO CRD42014007472).
C肽具有内在生物活性,可能具有肾脏保护作用。我们进行了一项系统评价,以确定C肽对肾脏结局是否有有益影响。检索了MEDLINE、EMBASE和Cochrane中央数据库,查找给予C肽并随后测量肾脏终点指标的人类和动物研究。我们确定了4项涉及74例患者的人类试验以及18项涉及35项独立实验、共641只动物的动物研究。在人类中,外源性给予C肽的肾脏效应仅在肾功能正常或早期肾病的1型糖尿病患者中进行了研究。汇总分析显示,与对照组相比,接受C肽治疗的患者肾小球滤过率(平均差异为-1.36 mL/min/1.73 m2,p = 0.72)无差异,但两项研究报告肾小球高滤过有所降低(p<0.05)。C肽组的蛋白尿也有所减少(p<0.05)。在糖尿病啮齿动物模型中,C肽导致肾小球滤过率降低(平均差异为-0.62 mL/min,p<0.00001),反映肾小球高滤过有所减轻。C肽还可降低糖尿病动物的蛋白尿(平均差异为-186.25 mg/天,p = 0.05)、肾小球体积(p<0.00001)和系膜基质面积(p<0.00001),且不影响血压或血糖。大多数研究持续时间相对较短,从1小时到3个月不等。需要开展足够样本量和持续时间的人类研究,以确定在动物模型中观察到的C肽的有益作用是否能转化为慢性肾脏病患者长期临床结局的改善。(国际前瞻性系统评价注册库编号:CRD42014007472)