Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Links Between Water and Salt Intake, Body Weight, Hypertension and Kidney Stones: a Difficult Puzzle
Nephrolithiasis is a disease that strikes roughly 10% of the Italian population and its
incidence in industrialized countries is on the increase. The most common form of the
disease (80%) is Idiopathic Calcium Nephrolithiasis (ICN) with calcium-oxalate (CaOx) and/or
calcium-phosphate (CaP) stones. The etiopathogenesis involves both genetic and acquired
factors, the interplay of which leads to urinary biochemical anomalies at the root of stone
formation. The elements and urinary compounds involved are known as "urinary stone risk
factors". The risk factors for CaOx stones consist of low urine volume, hypercalciuria,
hyperoxaluria, hyperuricosuria, hypocitraturia and hypomagnesuria. In the case of CaP
stones, the hyperphosphaturia and pH parameters are of particular importance; a pH>7
promotes the formation of stones prevalently composed of phosphates, while a pH of between 6
and 7, associated with a volume <1l/day, can raise CaP supersaturation to a dangerously high
level and lead to the formation of mixed CaOx and CaP stones. For uric acid stones, the
elements involved are hyperuricosuria and pH<5.5. In general, the most prevalent alteration
in ICN is hypercalciuria (50%). Hypertension and obesity are also social diseases with
important epidemiological similarities to nephrolithiasis. These affinities have led to the
search for a common pathogenic moment. As far as hypertension is concerned, various studies
have demonstrated high calciuria in hypertensives with a linear relationship between 24-h
calciuria and arterial blood pressure. The incidence of stone disease is greater in
hypertensives than in normotensives and, by the same token, the incidence of hypertension is
greater in stone formers than in non stone formers, but it is not clear whether
nephrolithiasis is a risk factor for hypertension or vice versa. Moreover, a linear
relationship exists between calciuria and natriuria, where the calcium is the dependent
variable, with a much steeper slope of the straight line in stone formers and hypertensives
compared to controls. It has, in fact, been demonstrated that to reduce calcium, it is more
efficacious to reduce sodium intake as opposed to calcium intake. Finally, BMI and body
weight are independently associated with an increase in stone risk even though, due to a
number of bias (limited weight categories, low number of obese persons in the study
populations, no control group, no recording of food intake) the studies published failed to
be conclusive. In the final analysis, stone disease, arterial hypertension and excess
weight/obesity prove to be closely interconnected and it is possible to intervene with
targeted diets aimed at reducing the risk of illness and death from these diseases. Among
such dietary approaches, the reduction of sodium chloride in food, increased hydration and
an increased intake of foods with an alkaline potential seem to play an important role.
For many years now, the investigators research unit has been involved in projects, partially
financed by the Italian Ministry of University and Research (MIUR), geared towards studying
the effects induced by dietary changes in patients with calcium stone disease. The aim of
the present project is to analyse in depth the relationship between stone disease,
hypertension, body weight and water and salt intake both in the general population of the
area of Parma (where historically and by gastronomic tradition, the usual diet tends to have
a high salt content) and in a selected population of stone formers and hypertensives not
under treatment. A representative sample of the population of the area of Parma will be
studied, divided on the basis of weight category, in order to assess water and salt intake
and relationships with the presence of hypertension, and a sample of normal and hypertensive
stone formers randomized to receive for one year either water therapy+low salt diet or water
therapy alone.
Status | Not yet recruiting |
Enrollment | 350 |
Est. completion date | May 2012 |
Est. primary completion date | May 2011 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 20 Years to 70 Years |
Eligibility |
For the stone formers main inclusion criteria - age between 20 and 70 years - caucasian race - idiopathic calcium stone disease - normal renal function (creatininemia <1.2 mg/dl) Main exclusion criteria - other major diseases - diseases affecting the mineral and electrolyte metabolism (diabetes, endocrine diseases, inflammatory diseases etc.) - treatments affecting the mineral and electrolytic metabolism (vitamin D, acetazolamide, anti-epilectic drugs, steroids etc). |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Italy | University of Parma | Parma |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Parma |
Italy,
Borghi L, Schianchi T, Meschi T, Guerra A, Allegri F, Maggiore U, Novarini A. Comparison of two diets for the prevention of recurrent stones in idiopathic hypercalciuria. N Engl J Med. 2002 Jan 10;346(2):77-84. — View Citation
Elliott P, Stamler J, Nichols R, Dyer AR, Stamler R, Kesteloot H, Marmot M. Intersalt revisited: further analyses of 24 hour sodium excretion and blood pressure within and across populations. Intersalt Cooperative Research Group. BMJ. 1996 May 18;312(7041):1249-53. Erratum in: BMJ 1997 Aug 23;315(7106):458. — View Citation
Goldfarb DS. Increasing prevalence of kidney stones in the United States. Kidney Int. 2003 May;63(5):1951-2. Review. — View Citation
Goulding A, McParland BE. Fasting and 24-h urinary sodium/creatinine values in young and elderly women on low-salt and salt-supplemented regimens. J Cardiovasc Pharmacol. 1990;16 Suppl 7:S47-9. — View Citation
Taylor EN, Stampfer MJ, Curhan GC. Obesity, weight gain, and the risk of kidney stones. JAMA. 2005 Jan 26;293(4):455-62. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | normalization of urinary stone risk factors | one year | No | |
Secondary | urinary sodium/calcium relationship | one yaer | No | |
Secondary | blood pressure reduction | one year | No | |
Secondary | relationship between 24h-calciuria and blood pressure | one year | No | |
Secondary | stone rate reduction | one year | No | |
Secondary | correlation BMI-urinary stone risk factors | one year | No | |
Secondary | compliance | one year | No |
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