Pre-Eclampsia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effect of L-Arginine Therapy on the Glomerular Injury of Pre-Eclampsia: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Pre-eclampsia complicates 7 - 10% of pregnancies and constitutes a leading cause of fetal growth retardation and premature birth, as well as infant and maternal morbidity and mortality. The kidney is the primary site of injury resulting in high blood pressure, loss of protein into the urine and decreased kidney function. The release of vasoconstrictors over vasodilators from an abnormal placenta may underlie pre-eclampsia. Nitric Oxide (NO) is an important vasodilator that is thought to play an important role in the kidneys ability to accommodate to a healthy pregnancy. Normal pregnancy in the rat is accompanied by increased production of NO and its second messenger cGMP. There is a parallel increase in renal expression of constitutive nitric oxide synthase (NOS), the enzyme that generates NO from arginine. In the pregnant rat, an infusion of NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME), an exogenous inhibitor of NOS, has been shown to replicate some of the hemodynamic features of the syndrome of pre-eclampsia. In a recent animal study, L-arginine supplementation reversed the adverse effects of L-NAME on pregnancy by attenuating the high blood pressure and by significantly decreasing protein loss in the urine. To date, studies of the use of L-arginine supplementation to treat women with pre-eclampsia have been small or uncontrolled and have only assessed blood pressure as a primary outcome measure. We report a single center, randomized, placebo-controlled trial of L-arginine supplementation for the treatment of pre-eclampsia, in which precise physiological techniques have been utilized to assess kidney dysfunction in addition to blood pressure.
OBJECTIVE: To assess the benefit of L-arginine, the precursor to nitric oxide (NO), to blood
pressure and recovery of the glomerular lesion in pre-eclampsia.
METHODS: 45 women with pre-eclampsia were randomized to receive either L-arginine or placebo
until day 10 post-partum. Primary outcome measures including MAP, glomerular filtration rate
and proteinuria were assessed on the third and tenth days postpartum by inulin clearance and
albumin-to-creatinine (A/C) ratio. NO, cyclic guanosine 3'5' monophosphate (cGMP),
endothelin-1 (ET) and asymmetric-dimethyl-arginine (ADMA) and arginine levels were assayed
prior to delivery, on the third and tenth day postpartum. Healthy gravid women provided
control values. Assuming a standard deviation of 10 mmHg, the study was powered to detect a
10 mmHg difference in MAP (alpha 0.05, beta 0.20) between the study groups.
RESULTS: No significant differences existed between the groups with pre-eclampsia prior to
randomization. Compared to the gravid control group, women with pre-eclampsia did not reveal
significantly depressed levels of serum arginine, but did reveal significantly increased
serum levels of ET, cGMP and ADMA prior to delivery. Despite a significant increase in serum
arginine levels due to treatment, no differences were found in the levels of NO, ET, cGMP or
ADMA between the two groups with pre-eclampsia. Further, there were no significant
differences in any of the primary outcome measures with both groups demonstrating equivalent
improvements in both blood pressure and proteinuria.
CONCLUSION: Blood pressure and kidney function improve markedly in pre-eclampsia by the
tenth day postpartum. L-arginine supplementation does not hasten this recovery.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double-Blind, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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