Lancet. 1997 Jun 28;349(9069):1857-63.
In diabetic nephropathy, angiotensin-converting-enzyme (ACE) inhibitors have a greater effect than other antihypertensive drugs on proteinuria and the progressive decline in glomerular filtration rate (GFR). Whether this difference applies to progression of nondiabetic proteinuric nephropathies is not clear. The Ramipril Efficacy in Nephropathy study of chronic nondiabetic nephropathies aimed to address whether glomerular protein traffic influences renal-disease progression, and whether an ACE inhibitor was superior to conventional treatment, with the same blood-pressure control, in reducing proteinuria, limiting GFR decline, and preventing endstage renal disease.
In this prospective double-blind trial, 352 patients were classified according to baseline proteinuria (stratum 1: 1-3 g/24 h; stratum 2: > or = 3 g/24 h), and randomly assigned ramipril or placebo plus conventional antihypertensive therapy targeted at achieving diastolic blood pressure under 90 mm Hg. The primary endpoint was the rate of GFR decline. Analysis was by intention to treat.
At the second planned interim analysis, the difference in decline in GFR between the ramipril and placebo groups in stratum 2 was highly significant (p = 0.001). The Independent Adjudicating Panel therefore decided to open the randomisation code and do the final analysis in this stratum (stratum 1 continued in the trial). Data (at least three GFR measurements including baseline) were available for 56 ramipril-assigned patients and 61 placebo-assigned patients. The decline in GFR per month was significantly lower in the ramipril group than the placebo group (0.53 [0.08] vs 0.88 [0.13] mL/min, p = 0.03). Among the ramipril-assigned patients, percentage reduction in proteinuria was inversely correlated with decline in GFR (p = 0.035) and predicted the reduction in risk of doubling of baseline creatinine or endstage renal failure (18 ramipril vs 40 placebo, p = 0.04). The risk of progression was still significantly reduced after adjustment for changes in systolic (p = 0.04) and diastolic (p = 0.04) blood pressure, but not after adjustment for changes in proteinuria. Blood-pressure control and the overall number of cardiovascular events were similar in the two treatment groups.
In chronic nephropathies with proteinuria of 3 g or more per 24 h, ramipril safely reduces proteinuria and the rate of GFR decline to an extent that seems to exceed the reduction expected for the degree of blood-pressure lowering.
在糖尿病肾病中,血管紧张素转换酶(ACE)抑制剂在降低蛋白尿和减缓肾小球滤过率(GFR)进行性下降方面比其他抗高血压药物效果更佳。这种差异是否适用于非糖尿病蛋白尿性肾病的进展尚不清楚。赖诺普利在肾病中的疗效研究针对慢性非糖尿病肾病,旨在探讨肾小球蛋白转运是否影响肾脏疾病进展,以及在血压控制相同的情况下,一种ACE抑制剂在降低蛋白尿、限制GFR下降和预防终末期肾病方面是否优于传统治疗。
在这项前瞻性双盲试验中,352例患者根据基线蛋白尿情况进行分类(第1层:1 - 3 g/24小时;第2层:≥3 g/24小时),并随机分配接受赖诺普利或安慰剂加传统抗高血压治疗,目标是使舒张压低于90 mmHg。主要终点是GFR下降率。分析采用意向性治疗。
在第二次计划的中期分析中,第2层赖诺普利组和安慰剂组之间GFR下降的差异非常显著(p = 0.001)。因此,独立裁决小组决定打开随机编码并在该层进行最终分析(第1层继续试验)。有56例接受赖诺普利治疗的患者和61例接受安慰剂治疗的患者可获得数据(至少三次GFR测量,包括基线值)。赖诺普利组每月GFR下降显著低于安慰剂组(0.53 [0.08] 对0.88 [0.13] mL/分钟,p = 0.03)。在接受赖诺普利治疗的患者中,蛋白尿减少百分比与GFR下降呈负相关(p = 0.035),并预测基线肌酐翻倍或终末期肾衰竭风险降低(18例接受赖诺普利治疗与40例接受安慰剂治疗,p = 0.04)。在调整收缩压(p = 0.04)和舒张压(p = 0.04)变化后,进展风险仍显著降低,但在调整蛋白尿变化后则不然。两个治疗组的血压控制和心血管事件总数相似。
在24小时蛋白尿≥3 g的慢性肾病中,赖诺普利能安全地降低蛋白尿和GFR下降率,其降低程度似乎超过了血压降低程度所预期的效果。