Kidney Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Angiotensin II Blockade for the Prevention of Cortical Interstitial Expansion and Graft Loss in Kidney Transplant Recipients
Chronic allograft nephropathy continues to be a major cause of kidney transplant loss and return to dialysis. Treatment options are limited and the course of the disease tends to be progressive. This trial is designed to prevent a major mediator of this process, namely the expansion of the cortical interstitial compartment of the kidney where most of the scarring occurs. The drug being studied, Losartan, has proven efficacious in a number of kidney diseases.
Renal transplant loss due to chronic allograft nephropathy (CAN) is widely acknowledged as a
major problem that has increased in relative importance as the incidence of early graft loss
from acute rejection has declined. Studies from various centers, including the University of
Minnesota, suggest that, after excluding patients dying with a functioning graft, as many as
80% of patients who will return to dialysis do so because of CAN. At the present time there
are no therapeutic options once the clinical manifestations of CAN have developed. Testing
measures to prevent CAN have not been addressed.
The overall purpose of this project is to investigate the role of the
renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) in the development of CAN. This system plays an
important role in the progression of many experimental and clinical renal diseases.
Furthermore, blockade of this system with angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors and
angiotensin II receptor blockers has yielded beneficial results in retarding injury and
progression in numerous intrinsic renal diseases. This study specifically investigates the
long term benefit of the angiotensin II receptor blocker, losartan, in the prevention of
cortical interstitial volume expansion (an accurate predictor of long term graft function)
and graft loss from biopsy proven CAN in a 5 year, randomized, double masked, placebo
controlled study of kidney transplant recipients. This clinical trial will directly test the
hypothesis that blockade of the renin angiotensin aldosterone system will provide a
substantial benefit through blood pressure lowering independent mechanisms, namely,
interruption of fibrogenic pathways, anti-proteinuric actions, amelioration of
hyperfiltration and possibly some immunomodulatory effects.
The proposed studies will also characterize the interstitial ultrastructural compositional
changes that occur in the renal allografts with CAN, the effects of treatment on these
changes and provide a complete description of the incidence and predictors for the
development of transplant glomerulopathy. These studies will also determine the impact of
angiotensin II receptor blockade on the rate of decline of glomerular filtration rate, as
well as the impact of glomerular size on the rate of graft loss from CAN, the incidence and
the progression of post transplant proteinuria, the nature of the permselectivity defects
responsible for the proteinuria and will also explore the association of proteinuria with
graft loss from CAN. This trial will also help construct a profile for the RAAS in the
transplant recipients and explore the relationship between two genes polymorphisms, ACE and
TGF-Beta, and CAN.
These studies should help to describe the natural history, nature and pathogenesis of CAN,
elucidate early markers and predictors of this important disorder and, perhaps, define a safe
and useful preventative strategy.
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