Hobbs F D Richard, McManus Richard, Taylor Clare, Jones Nicholas, Rahman Joy, Wolstenholme Jane, Jones Louise, Hirst Jennifer, Mort Sam, Yu Ly-Mee
Nuffield Department of Primary Health Care Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
NIHR Applied Research Collaboration Oxford and Thames Valley, Oxford, UK.
Health Technol Assess. 2025 Mar;29(5):1-130. doi: 10.3310/PYFT6977.
Chronic kidney disease affects around 10% of the global population and is associated with significant risk of progression to end-stage renal disease and vascular events. Aldosterone receptor antagonists such as spironolactone have shown prognostic benefits in patients with heart failure, but effects on patients with chronic kidney disease are uncertain.
To determine the effect of low-dose spironolactone on mortality and cardiovascular outcomes in people with chronic kidney disease stage 3b.
Prospective randomised open blinded end-point trial.
Three hundred and twenty-nine general practitioner practices throughout the United Kingdom.
Patients meeting the criteria for chronic kidney disease stage 3b (estimated glomerular filtration rate 30-44 ml/minute/1.73 m) according to National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guidelines were recruited. Due to the higher than anticipated measurement error/fluctuations, the eligible range was extended to 30-50 ml/minute/1.73 m following the initial recruitment period.
Participants were randomised 1 : 1 to receive either spironolactone 25 mg once daily in addition to standard care, or standard care only.
Primary outcome was the first occurring of all-cause mortality, first hospitalisation for heart disease (coronary heart disease, arrhythmia, atrial fibrillation, sudden death, failed sudden death), stroke, heart failure, transient ischaemic attack or peripheral arterial disease, or first occurrence of any condition not listed at baseline. Secondary outcome measures included changes in blood pressure, renal function, B-type natriuretic peptide, incidence of hyperkalaemia and treatment costs and benefits.
One thousand four hundred and thirty-four participants were randomised of the 3022 planned. We found no evidence of differences between the intervention and control groups in terms of effectiveness with the primary combined vascular end points, nor with the secondary clinical outcomes, including progression in renal decline. These results were similar for the total treatment periods or a 3-year follow-up period as originally planned. More adverse events were experienced and more participants discontinued treatment in the intervention group. Two-thirds of participants randomised to spironolactone stopped treatment within six months because they met pre-specified safety stop criteria. The addition of low-dose spironolactone was estimated to have a cost per quality-adjusted life-year gained value above the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence's threshold of £30,000.
Main limitations were difficulties in recruiting eligible participants resulting in an underpowered trial with poor ethnic diversity taking twice as long as planned to complete. We have explored the data in secondary analyses that indicate that, despite these difficulties, the findings were reliable.
The benefits of aldosterone receptor antagonism in chronic kidney disease trial found no evidence to support adding low-dose spironolactone (25 mg daily) in patients with chronic kidney disease stage 3b: there were no changes to cardiovascular events during the trial follow-up, either for the combined primary or individual components. There was also no evidence of benefit observed in rates of renal function decline over the trial, but much higher initial creatinine rise and estimated glomerular filtration rate decline, and to a higher percentage rate, in the intervention arm in the first few weeks of spironolactone treatment, which resulted in a high proportion of participants discontinuing spironolactone treatment at an early stage. These higher rates of negative renal change reduced in scale over the study but did not equalise between arms. The addition of 25 mg of spironolactone therefore provided no reno- or cardio-protection and was associated with an increase in adverse events.
These findings might not be applicable to different mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists.
Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN44522369.
This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment programme (NIHR award ref: 12/01/52) and is published in full in ; Vol. 29, No. 5. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information.
慢性肾脏病影响着全球约10%的人口,并与进展至终末期肾病和血管事件的重大风险相关。醛固酮受体拮抗剂如螺内酯已在心力衰竭患者中显示出预后益处,但对慢性肾脏病患者的影响尚不确定。
确定低剂量螺内酯对3b期慢性肾脏病患者死亡率和心血管结局的影响。
前瞻性随机开放盲终点试验。
英国各地的329家全科医生诊所。
招募符合国家卫生与保健优化研究所指南中3b期慢性肾脏病标准(估计肾小球滤过率为30 - 44 ml/分钟/1.73 m²)的患者。由于测量误差/波动高于预期,在初始招募期后,符合条件的范围扩大到30 - 50 ml/分钟/1.73 m²。
参与者按1:1随机分组,除接受标准治疗外,一组每天一次服用25 mg螺内酯,另一组仅接受标准治疗。
主要结局是全因死亡率、首次因心脏病(冠心病、心律失常、心房颤动、猝死、猝死未遂)、中风、心力衰竭、短暂性脑缺血发作或外周动脉疾病住院,或首次出现基线未列出的任何情况。次要结局指标包括血压、肾功能、B型利钠肽的变化、高钾血症的发生率以及治疗成本和效益。
计划招募3022名参与者,其中1434名被随机分组。我们发现,在主要合并血管终点的有效性方面,干预组和对照组之间没有差异,在次要临床结局方面也没有差异,包括肾功能下降的进展。在整个治疗期或最初计划的3年随访期内,结果相似。干预组经历了更多不良事件,更多参与者停止治疗。随机分配接受螺内酯治疗的参与者中有三分之二在六个月内停止治疗,因为他们符合预先设定的安全停药标准。估计添加低剂量螺内酯每获得一个质量调整生命年的成本高于国家卫生与保健优化研究所设定的30,000英镑阈值。
主要局限性在于招募符合条件的参与者存在困难,导致试验效能不足,种族多样性差,完成时间比计划长了一倍。我们在二次分析中探索了数据,结果表明,尽管存在这些困难,研究结果仍然可靠。
慢性肾脏病试验中醛固酮受体拮抗作用的益处研究未发现证据支持在3b期慢性肾脏病患者中添加低剂量螺内酯(每日25 mg):在试验随访期间,无论是合并的主要终点还是各个组成部分,心血管事件均无变化。在试验期间,也没有观察到肾功能下降率有获益的证据,但在螺内酯治疗的最初几周内,干预组的初始肌酐升高和估计肾小球滤过率下降幅度更大,且下降百分比更高,这导致很大比例的参与者在早期就停止了螺内酯治疗。这些肾功能负面变化的较高发生率在研究过程中有所降低,但两组之间并未达到平衡。因此,添加25 mg螺内酯未提供肾脏或心脏保护作用,反而与不良事件增加相关。
这些发现可能不适用于不同的盐皮质激素受体拮抗剂。
当前受控试验ISRCTN44522369。
本研究由国家卫生与保健研究机构(NIHR)卫生技术评估计划资助(NIHR资助编号:12/01/52),全文发表于《》第29卷,第5期。有关更多资助信息,请参阅NIHR资助与奖项网站。