Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The study will be conducted at Assiut University Hospital. Eligible subjects will be screened for vascular calcification by Doppler ultrasound examination. A correation between the level of serum Osteopontin (OPN) level and the extent of vascular calcification will be evaluated.


Clinical Trial Description

Osteopontin (OPN) is one of integrin-binding N-linked glycoproteins, which is produced by activated mononuclear cells and is linked to increasing evidence about the role of OPN in vascular calcification[1].

Recent clinical studies have shown that vascular calcification is a pathological process leading to mechanical rigidity and stiffness of vascular wall, endothelial dysfunction, development and accelerating atherosclerosis even in the absence of established cardiovascular (CV) disease . Ectopic calcification is explained by several mutually counteracting molecular mechanisms, i.e. oxidative stress, microvascular inflammation, immune cell-to-cell cooperation, accumulation of lipids and extracellular proteins, vascular reparative systems, and metabolic disorders All these processes are under tight regulation of vitamin D, parathyroid hormone-related peptides (fibroblast growth factor, transcription factor Sox2, beta-catenin, etc) and matricellular proteins such as OPN. [2].

OPN was found to have relation with vascular calcification, atherosclerosis, and CV disease associated with severe vascular remodelling including hypertension, chronic kidney disease, diabetes mellitus . In this context, OPN is a promising biomarker of vascular remodelling closely related to inflammation intensity, glucose level and pro-thrombotic state with promising predictive value for CV events [3].

It is a matricellular protein that was first identified in 1995 by Heingard et al. as sialoprotein derived from bovine bone matrix . During the last decade a number of studies analysed the role of OPN in the pathogenesis of diabetic nephropathy. This proposed association needs confirmation and detailed description by further research [4].

At first, OPN has been reported to be highly expressed in the tubular epithelium of the renal cortex and in glomeruli in rat and mouse models of diabetic nephropathy [5]. This was associated with extensive macrophage accumulation in the kidney interstitium indicating that OPN upregulation and macrophage recruitment may play a role in the tubulo-interstitial injury in diabetic nephropathy [6]. Consistently, OPN/mice are protected from diabetes-induced albuminuria and renal damage, possibly by modulating podocyte signaling and motility [7]. In humans, plasma OPN levels are independently associated with presence and severity of diabetic nephropathy [8] Compelling evidence in the literature provides interesting clues about a link between the rennin-angiotensin system (RAS) and OPN in diabetic kidney disease. Diabetes-induced OPN expression and macrophage accumulation in the kidney interstitium of diabetic rats are significantly ameliorated after treatment with the long acting ACE inhibitor [9]. Showing that treatment with ramipril for nine month improves creatinine clearance rate and decreases urinary protein excretion, systolic blood pressure, development of glomerulosclerosis, tubulo-interstitial fibrosis and inflammatory cell infiltration in a diabetics. Of note, all these effects of ACE inhibition were associated with markedly suppressed OPN expression, suggesting that blockade of the RAS by ramipril may confer renoprotection by decreasing OPN secretion in diabetic nephropathy [10]. Liver X receptors (LXRs) have been identified as important lipid-dependent regulators of glucose metabolism and immune functions in leukocytes [11]. Synthetic LXR ligands can inhibit cytokine-induced OPN expression in macrophages [12]. Tachibana and colleges recently observed decreased urinary albumin excretion and substantially attenuated macrophage infiltration, mesangial matrix accumulation and interstitial fibrosis in streptozotocin-induced diabetics following administration of the LXR agonist T0901317. Notably, this was paralleled by diminished OPN expression in the kidney cortex indicating that inhibition of renal OPN by LXR activation may provide a potential therapeutical approach for diabetic nephropathy [13].

Osteopontin (OPN) is a multifunctional protein expressed by several different cell types, although the bone is known to be a major source [14].The exact excretion pathway of OPN from the body is not known. OPN is involved in a number of physiological and pathological conditions, including (1), urinary stones (2), wound healing (3), chronic inflammatory and autoimmune diseases (4), obesity-related chronic inflammation, and insulin resistance. However, OPN was originally found in bone and shown to regulate the formation and calcification of bone tissue. [15].

Notably, OPN has also been linked to vascular remodelling and calcification, especially in diabetic arteries, and has been shown to associate with diabetic retinopathy and nephropathy in patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D), as well as cardiovascular disease (CVD) events in diabetic subjects with history of long standing diabetes. [16] ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03820635
Study type Observational
Source Assiut University
Contact
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase
Start date March 1, 2019
Completion date September 1, 2020

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Enrolling by invitation NCT05530356 - Renal Hemodynamics, Energetics and Insulin Resistance: A Follow-up Study
Terminated NCT01575379 - A Pilot Study of Allopurinol to Prevent Kidney Function Loss in Type 1 Diabetes Phase 4
Active, not recruiting NCT05656963 - The Influencing Factors and Mechanism of High Incidence of Thrombotic Events in Patients With MN and DKD
Not yet recruiting NCT04084886 - TCF7L2 Gene Polymorphism and AGEs in Diabetic Nephropathy
Active, not recruiting NCT04869761 - Stem Cell Therapy for Chronic Kidney Disease Phase 1
Recruiting NCT04570735 - MRI Biomarkers in Diabetic Kidney Disease
Completed NCT03165240 - This International Study Tests BI 690517 in Patients With Diabetic Kidney Disease. The Study Tests How 3 Different Doses of BI 690517 Are Taken up in the Body and How Well They Are Tolerated Phase 1
Completed NCT01968668 - Safety and Efficacy of Different Oral Doses of BAY94-8862 in Japanese Subjects With Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus and the Clinical Diagnosis of Diabetic Nephropathy (ARTS-DN Japan) Phase 2
Completed NCT02552277 - A Efficacy and Safety Study of Intramuscular Injection of Human Placenta-Derived Cells (PDA-002) in Subjects With Diabetic Peripheral Neuropathy Phase 2
Terminated NCT03840343 - Patient-Derived Stem Cell Therapy for Diabetic Kidney Disease Phase 1
Terminated NCT02410005 - Intervention Using Vitamin D for Elevated Urinary Albumin Treated With Losartan in Diabetes (IDEAL) Phase 2/Phase 3
Unknown status NCT01918488 - Increased Activity of a Renal Salt Transporter (ENaC) in Diabetic Kidney Disease N/A
Completed NCT00915200 - N-Acetylcysteine and Milk Thistle for Treatment of Diabetic Nephropathy Phase 2
Completed NCT03165227 - This Study Tests a New Medicine Called BI 685509 in Patients That Have Kidney Problems Because of Diabetes. The Study Tests How BI 685509 is Taken up in the Body and How Well it is Tolerated (Multiple Rising Doses) Phase 1
Active, not recruiting NCT04531163 - Possible Ameliorating Effect of N- Acetylcysteine (NAC) on Type-II Diabetes Induced Nephropathy Phase 2/Phase 3
Active, not recruiting NCT03620773 - Impact of Metabolic Surgery on Pancreatic, Renal and Cardiovascular Health in Youth With Type 2 Diabetes Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT03618420 - Copeptin in Adolescent Participants With Type 1 Diabetes and Early Renal Hemodynamic Function Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT03334318 - PERL Continuous Glucose Monitoring (CGM) Study
Not yet recruiting NCT03284996 - Doppler Ultrasound in Early Detection of Diabetic Nephropathy Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus. N/A
Completed NCT04380584 - Relation Between Plasma Apelin Level and Diabetic Nephropathy in Type 2 Diabetes Patients.