Belcher Justin M, Parada Xavier Vela, Simonetto Douglas A, Juncos Luis A, Karakala Nithin, Wadei Hani M, Sharma Pratima, Regner Kevin R, Nadim Mitra K, Garcia-Tsao Guadalupe, Velez Juan Carlos Q, Parikh Samir M, Chung Raymond T, Allegretti Andrew S
Department of Medicine, Section of Nephrology, School of Medicine, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut; Section of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts; Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
VA-Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven, Connecticut; Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
Am J Kidney Dis. 2022 May;79(5):737-745. doi: 10.1053/j.ajkd.2021.08.016. Epub 2021 Oct 2.
Hepatorenal syndrome (HRS) is a form of acute kidney injury (AKI) occurring in patients with advanced cirrhosis and is associated with significant morbidity and mortality. The pathophysiology underlying HRS begins with increasing portal pressures leading to the release of vasodilatory substances that result in pooling blood in the splanchnic system and a corresponding reduction in effective circulating volume. Compensatory activation of the sympathetic nervous system and the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system and release of arginine vasopressin serve to defend mean arterial pressure but at the cost of severe constriction of the renal vasculature, leading to a progressive, often fulminant form of AKI. There are no approved treatments for HRS in the United States, but multiple countries, including much of Europe, use terlipressin, a synthetic vasopressin analogue, as a first-line therapy. CONFIRM (A Multi-Center, Randomized, Placebo Controlled, Double-Blind Study to Confirm Efficacy and Safety of Terlipressin in Subjects With Hepatorenal Syndrome Type 1), the third randomized trial based in North America evaluating terlipressin, met its primary end point of showing greater rates of HRS reversal in the terlipressin arm. However, due to concerns about the apparent increased rates of respiratory adverse events and a lack of evidence for mortality benefit, terlipressin was not approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). We explore the history of regulatory approval for terlipressin in the United States, examine the results from CONFIRM and the concerns they raised, and consider the future role of terlipressin in this critical clinical area of continued unmet need.
肝肾综合征(HRS)是一种发生在晚期肝硬化患者中的急性肾损伤(AKI)形式,与显著的发病率和死亡率相关。HRS的病理生理学始于门静脉压力升高,导致血管舒张物质释放,从而使血液在内脏系统中淤积,有效循环血容量相应减少。交感神经系统和肾素 - 血管紧张素 - 醛固酮系统的代偿性激活以及精氨酸加压素的释放有助于维持平均动脉压,但代价是肾血管严重收缩,导致一种进行性的、通常是暴发性的AKI形式。在美国,尚无获批用于治疗HRS的药物,但包括欧洲大部分国家在内的多个国家使用特利加压素(一种合成的加压素类似物)作为一线治疗药物。CONFIRM(一项多中心、随机、安慰剂对照、双盲研究,旨在证实特利加压素对1型肝肾综合征患者的疗效和安全性)是北美开展的第三项评估特利加压素的随机试验,达到了其主要终点,即特利加压素组的HRS逆转率更高。然而,由于担心呼吸不良事件发生率明显增加且缺乏死亡率获益的证据,特利加压素未获得美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)的批准。我们探讨了特利加压素在美国的监管批准历史,审视了CONFIRM试验的结果及其引发的担忧,并思考了特利加压素在这个仍存在未满足需求的关键临床领域的未来作用。