Abstract
Recently, deleterious effects of aldosterone on the kidney via mineralocorticoid receptors (MRs) have been noted. MR antagonists have been reported to show significant antialbuminuric effects when added to angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors or angiotensin II type 1 receptor blockers. However, a decrease in the estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) has been reported during MR antagonist treatment. On the other hand, although the eGFR often decreases, significant reductions in total mortality and cardiovascular events have been observed in large-scale clinical trials in patients with chronic heart failure. What are the implications of the changes in eGFR due to MR antagonist treatment? Glomerular hyperfiltration has been reported to occur with an aldosterone excess, and it can be seen that relative glomerular hyperfiltration is rapidly corrected with MR antagonism, even without aldosterone excess. This is reflected in the initial temporary decrease in the eGFR. After MR antagonist treatment, eGFR decreases temporarily, and it appears that renal function has deteriorated. However, if renal function has actually deteriorated, a reduction in all-cause and cardiovascular death is unlikely to occur in the clinical studies in patients with chronic heart failure. That is, the initial transient decrease in eGFR by the MR antagonist appears to work effectively to provide fine adjustment of glomerular pressure, and this approach works advantageously to suppress long-term cardiovascular events. It is expected that a number of long-term, large-scale clinical research trials targeting renal events and all-cause and cardiovascular death in CKD patients treated with an MR antagonist will be planned.
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Introduction
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) affects a large and growing number of patients, and the control of its onset and progression has become an important clinical issue worldwide [1]. CKD is a risk factor for end-stage renal failure as well as a major risk factor for the development of cardiovascular diseases, and it affects life expectancy [2,3,4,5]. The therapeutic goals are to suppress the decrease in eGFR and reduce proteinuria and albuminuria. However, a common clinical experience during the treatment of CKD is that these two goals cannot both be met. After antihypertensive drugs are started, there is a decrease in eGFR, whereas proteinuria and albuminuria are also decreasing at that time.
Recently, deleterious effects of aldosterone on the kidney via mineralocorticoid receptors (MRs) have been noted [6, 7]. MR antagonists have been reported to show significant antiproteinuric and antialbuminuric effects when added to angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor or angiotensin II type 1 receptor blocker (ARB) therapy [8,9,10,11,12,13]. However, a decrease in eGFR has been reported during MR antagonist treatment. On the other hand, although eGFR is frequently decreased, significant reductions in total mortality and cardiovascular events by MR antagonists have been observed in large-scale clinical trials in patients with chronic heart failure [14,15,16]. What are the implications of the changes in eGFR due to MR antagonist treatment? In this review paper, the renal effects of MR antagonist treatment are summarized in terms of the effect on eGFR.
An early temporary decrease in eGFR during treatment and a decrease in eGFR over the years have different meanings
Decreased eGFR is an independent risk factor for all-cause mortality and death from cardiovascular disease [17]. This is particularly evident when observing changes in eGFR on a yearly basis, which is a significant risk factor for overall mortality and coronary artery disease [5, 18,19,20]. There were many renal and cardiovascular events in patients with decreases of at least 12.7% in renal function after treatment with an ACE inhibitor or ARB in the ONTARGET (Ongoing Telmisartan Alone and in Combination with Ramipril Global Endpoint Trial) trial or the TRANSCEND (Telmisartan Randomized Assessment Study in ACE Intolerant Participants with Cardiovascular Disease) trial [21].
On the other hand, after antihypertensive drugs are started, a temporary, rapid decline in eGFR may be observed. In this case, eGFR often recovers to some extent early thereafter. From the analysis of the RENAAL (Reduction of Endpoints in Non-Insulin-Dependent Diabetes Mellitus with the Angiotensin II antagonist Losartan) trial, Holtkamp et al. showed that the ARB-treated group had a significant decrease in eGFR compared with the placebo group at 3 months after the start of treatment. However, long-term changes in eGFR were slower in the ARB-treated group [22]. Such a temporary decrease in eGFR after the start of antihypertensive drugs is considered to restore glomerular hyperfiltration [23]. On discontinuation of ACE inhibitor or ARB therapy, eGFR recovers [24], indicating that it does not cause irreversible renal dysfunction [25]. The degree of initial eGFR decline correlated inversely with the subsequent decline in eGFR [23]. At the time of strict blood pressure control, an early transient decrease in eGFR is also often observed [26]. However, if blood pressure is properly controlled, this initial transient eGFR decline does not appear to be harmful [27,28,29].
In CKD and hypertension treatment, the implications are different between an early temporary decrease in eGFR after the start of treatment and the decrease in eGFR lasting for a relatively long time. In the case of the early, temporary decrease, eGFR mostly falls within a certain range, it does not decrease greatly, and it recovers, although it is slightly lower than the previous value, and there is no continuous decline thereafter. In the long run, it is likely to be beneficial. On the other hand, in the long-term decrease case, it is an obvious risk factor for overall mortality and an independent risk factor for cardiovascular events.
Implications of a transient, rapid eGFR decline after initiation of treatment as discussed from clinical studies using a sodium–glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT-2) inhibitor
A significant reduction in the primary endpoint consisting of the composite of cardiovascular death, nonfatal myocardial infarction, and nonfatal stroke was shown in the EMPA-REG OUTCOME (Empagliflozin Cardiovascular Outcome Event Trial in Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Patients) trial using the SGLT-2 inhibitor empagliflozin [30]. In its subanalysis, empagliflozin suppressed the transition to overt proteinuria and renal events. The change in eGFR with empagliflozin was very similar to that with ACE inhibitor or ARB therapy. It dropped temporarily by approximately 4 weeks and remained stable at a level lower than the previous value through 12 weeks. At 192 weeks, eGFR was significantly higher than in the placebo group [31, 32]. Mostly similar results were also reported from the CANVAS (Canagliflozin cardiovascular assessment study) and CANVAS-R (CANVAS-Renal) studies using canagliflozin [33, 34].
Diabetic patients are more likely to develop a rise in intraglomerular pressure resulting in glomerular hyperfiltration. This is because the function of the afferent artery is reduced, and the ability to maintain the proper intraglomerular pressure weakens [35]. Glomerular hyperfiltration is a predictor of subsequent renal dysfunction, and untreated patients have a higher frequency of proteinuria than treated patients with less hyperfiltration [36, 37]. Empagliflozin reduces intraglomerular pressure in type 1 diabetic patients and corrects glomerular hyperfiltration [38, 39]. An SGLT-2 inhibitor suppresses sodium reabsorption in the proximal tubule, and sodium chloride is transported to the macula densa. Due to the increases in sodium and chloride ions in the lumen, tubuloglomerular feedback causes the afferent artery to contract and the intraglomerular pressure to decrease [40]. SGLT-2 inhibitors are thought to be so-called regulators of intraglomerular pressure, which are capable of directly adjusting the intraglomerular pressure. The beneficial effects shown in the EMPA-REG OUTCOME trial and the CANVAS/CANVAS-R trial were attributed to appropriate control and maintenance of intraglomerular pressure by the SGLT-2 inhibitor.
Figure 1 shows the change in eGFR in the active and placebo groups in the EMPA-REG OUTCOME trial [31]. Empagliflozin caused a temporary 5–6% decrease in eGFR after 4 weeks of treatment, but eGFR recovered after 12 weeks and stabilized at a lower value than before treatment. The treatment maintained the level as it is. As a result, a marked renal and cardiovascular protective effect was shown. It is thought that the glomerular hyperfiltration correction effect in the early stage of treatment is linked to the long-term renal protective effect. With the temporary correction of the intraglomerular pressure, the self-regulatory function of the kidney may have begun to work. Glomerular hyperfiltration cannot be judged only by the absolute value of eGFR. Even if the absolute value of eGFR is not high, it may be relatively high for the individual because of age, sex, and underlying disease. From that point of view, diabetes patients have a fairly high rate of glomerular hyperfiltration [41]. Therefore, the temporary lowering of eGFR at the initial phase is thought to be followed by a long-term protective effect against the progression of renal dysfunction, even if the absolute value of eGFR before treatment is not very high.
The shape of the graph of the eGFR change in the active drug group in Fig. 1 may be a new predictor of the long-term renal and cardiovascular protective effect in CKD patients. More importantly, in the EMPA-REG OUTCOME trial and the CANVAS/CANVAS-R trial, the prescription rate of ACE inhibitors and ARBs was as high as 80–84% [33, 42]. An SGLT-2 inhibitor was added to further adjust the intraglomerular pressure to obtain a beneficial clinical effect. That is, treatment with the ACE inhibitor or ARB alone was insufficient. Therefore, MR antagonists, which are another class of drugs that can adjust the intraglomerular pressure, are expected to have a renoprotective effect.
Effect of MR antagonist treatment on eGFR
Glomerular hyperfiltration has been reported to occur with an aldosterone excess [43]. Glomerular hyperfiltration with aldosterone excess has also been shown to lead to a rapid drop in eGFR when left to stand [44]. In fact, in patients with primary aldosteronism, plasma aldosterone levels have been reported to be important predictors of renal dysfunction [45]. In studies involving the general population, the aldosterone-renin ratio and plasma aldosterone concentrations were inversely correlated with the eGFR, and as plasma aldosterone concentrations increase, the risk of developing CKD increases [46]. That is, a high plasma aldosterone concentration even within the normal range suggests that glomerular pressure may be increased and may be involved in renal dysfunction. Basic experiments have demonstrated that aldosterone contracts both the afferent and efferent arteries in a dose-dependent manner, but the efferent artery contracts more strongly [47]; thus, the intraglomerular pressure rises. Therefore, glomerular capillary pressure is increased in the experimental model of mineralocorticoid-salt hypertension [48]. However, according to Arima et al., contraction of the afferent and efferent arteries by aldosterone is a nongenomic effect that is not suppressed by spironolactone and is not mediated by the classical MR [47]. There are some basic research reports on so-called putative membrane MR-mediated actions that cannot be blocked by MR antagonists. However, it has recently become clear that almost all actions of aldosterone are mediated by the classical MR [49], and in fact, data strongly suggest that the contractile actions of the efferent artery caused by aldosterone are blocked by an MR antagonist.
Administration of an MR antagonist reduces eGFR, and it is believed that relative glomerular hyperfiltration caused by aldosterone has been relieved, but what does this mean clinically for CKD treatment? Six months after surgery for an aldosterone-producing adenoma, eGFR decreased by ~15%, but urinary albumin excretion and markers for tubular damage were significantly reduced [43]. Treatment with the MR antagonist spironolactone in patients with primary aldosteronism resulted in an average 8 ml/min decrease in eGFR after 1 month, which was greater than that of the conventional treatment group. However, proteinuria was significantly reduced compared with the conventional therapy group, and the decrease in eGFR was less than that in the conventional therapy group after 1 year [50]. After surgery or medical treatment of primary aldosteronism, the decline in eGFR for up to 6 months was larger than in patients with essential hypertension, but the progression of eGFR did not differ thereafter between primary aldosteronism and essential hypertension. There were significantly more primary aldosteronism patients who improved from microalbuminuria to normoalbuminuria than essential hypertension patients [51].
The effects of an MR antagonist on eGFR have also been shown for conditions that do not necessarily cause aldosterone excess. Aldosterone breakthrough occurs in some patients as a reincrease in plasma aldosterone after some length of treatment with an ACE inhibitor or ARB [13, 52]. When aldosterone breakthrough occurs, the decrease in eGFR is enhanced [53]. The EVALUATE (The Eplerenone Combination Versus Conventional Agent to Lower Blood Pressure on Urinary Antialbuminuric Treatment Effect) trial was conducted to examine the antialbuminuric effects of the MR antagonist eplerenone in nondiabetic Japanese CKD patients with hypertension [54]. In that trial, a significant decrease in eGFR was observed 8 weeks after treatment with eplerenone, but it remained stable. The urinary albumin excretion rate in the early morning after 52 weeks, which was the primary endpoint, was significantly reduced in the eplerenone group.
From these studies, it can be seen that relative glomerular hyperfiltration is rapidly corrected with MR antagonist treatment, even without aldosterone excess. This is reflected in the initial temporary decrease in the eGFR. As a result, there are reductions in proteinuria and albuminuria in the short term. However, there are few relatively long-term, large-scale clinical studies of MR antagonists that assessed long-term prognosis and cardiovascular system outcomes in CKD patients.
Clinical significance of eGFR reduction by MR antagonists demonstrated by large-scale clinical studies targeting heart failure
The effects of MR antagonists on eGFR can be inferred from large-scale clinical trials investigating the effects of MR antagonists in patients with chronic heart failure and left ventricular dysfunction after myocardial infarction [14,15,16]. Despite the beneficial effects of MR antagonists reported by clinical studies, MR antagonists are not frequently used in conditions for which aggressive use is recommended, such as chronic heart failure with reduced systolic function (HFrEF) [55]. This is likely due to concerns about renal dysfunction and hyperkalemia caused by MR antagonists. However, when we analyze those studies in detail, completely different interpretations appear. Eplerenone has been shown to significantly reduce the composite primary endpoint of all-cause mortality, cardiovascular death, and sudden cardiac death in the EPHESUS (Eplerenone Post-acute Myocardial Infarction Heart Failure Efficacy and Survival) study for patients with left ventricular dysfunction after myocardial infarction [15]. In the subanalysis of EPHESUS, when the effect on eGFR of eplerenone was examined, there was a rapid decrease in eGFR one month after the initiation of treatment, but it was stable thereafter. One month later, patients with a 20% or greater reduction in eGFR had a higher incidence of cardiovascular events regardless of the pretreatment eGFR value if they were not taking eplerenone. However, even with a reduction of 20% or more, survival was improved, and cardiovascular events were significantly suppressed in the patients treated with eplerenone [56].
It has been shown in EMPHASIS-HF (the Eplerenone in Mild Patients Hospitalization and Survival Study in Heart Failure) study, which examined the effects of eplerenone in patients with mild HFrEF, that the combined primary endpoint of cardiovascular death and first hospitalization for heart failure was significantly reduced.
Total mortality was also reduced, and life expectancy was improved [16]. In the subanalysis, after 21 months of treatment, in 27% of cases, the eGFR decreased by 20% or more, and in 14% of cases, it decreased by 30% or more. Although this rate was high in the eplerenone treatment group, there was a significant decrease in total mortality in the eplerenone group. The eGFR in the eplerenone group dropped rapidly in the first 5 months, which was consistent with the behavior seen in previous reports [57]. After MR antagonist treatment, eGFR decreases temporarily, and it appears that renal function has deteriorated. However, even if renal function has actually deteriorated, there is evidence for a reduction in all-cause and cardiovascular death. That is, the initial transient decrease in eGFR by the MR antagonist appears to work effectively to provide fine adjustment of glomerular pressure, and this works advantageously to suppress long-term cardiovascular events. Subgroup analysis of the groups with eGFR under 60 ml/min also showed the clinical efficacy of an MR antagonist, since it did not inherently impair renal function [58]. Such an effect is likely to apply to the renal protection of CKD treatment. If glomerular pressure can be controlled appropriately, it is thought that long-term renal protective effects will occur. If the change in eGFR similar to that shown in Fig. 1 can be confirmed after the treatment with MR antagonist, it can be inferred that the intraglomerular pressure is properly controlled.
At what stage of CKD can the clinical effects of MR antagonism be expected? The majority of previous clinical studies have shown that an MR antagonist is most effective in patients who have early stages of CKD with maintained eGFR. The BARACK D (benefit of aldosterone receptor antagonism in chronic kidney disease) trial is currently underway to investigate the effects of spironolactone in patients with CKD stage G3b [59]. The group with 25 mg of spironolactone added to the standard treatment will be compared with the placebo group, and the primary endpoint will not be a surrogate marker, such as albuminuria or BNP, but death or a cardiovascular event, and an impact will be obtained if the result is superior.
CKD treatment from now on considering intraglomerular pressure adjustment
Figure 2 shows the main hormones and peptides that act on the renal afferent and efferent arteries and directly alter intraglomerular pressure. Among them, ACE inhibitors and ARBs are thought to act on the efferent artery, and SGLT-2 inhibitors are thought to act on the afferent artery. An MR antagonist acts relatively more on the efferent artery [47]. ACE inhibitors and ARBs are the main therapeutic agents for CKD, but it is difficult to sufficiently delay CKD progression. Therefore, an SGLT-2 inhibitor has been added to provide further renal protection and suppress cardiovascular events [30, 33, 34]. If there is an additional MR antagonist, will there be further beneficial effects?
The CVD-REAL Nordic trial comparing cardiovascular events of type 2 diabetic patients who started an SGLT-2 inhibitor or other hypoglycemic agent has been helpful [60]. In that trial, an ACE inhibitor or ARB was prescribed to ~67%, but the MR antagonist prescription rate was very low, at 4.4%. In the group prescribed an MR antagonist, the incidences of fatal cardiovascular events and major cardiovascular events were reduced.
Conclusion
Relative glomerular hyperfiltration is rapidly corrected with MR antagonist treatment, even without aldosterone excess. This is reflected in the initial temporary decrease in the eGFR. As a result, there are reductions in proteinuria and albuminuria in the short term. A frequent temporary decrease in eGFR at the initial phase and significant reductions in total mortality and cardiovascular events by MR antagonist have been observed in patients with chronic heart failure. It is expected that a number of relatively long-term, large-scale clinical research trials targeting renal events and all-cause and cardiovascular death in CKD patients treated with an MR antagonist will be planned.
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Sato, A. Does the temporary decrease in the estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) after initiation of mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) antagonist treatment lead to a long-term renal protective effect?. Hypertens Res 42, 1841–1847 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41440-019-0320-9
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41440-019-0320-9
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