| Literature DB >> 29226122 |
Line Aas Mortensen1,2, Claus Bistrup1,2, Helle Charlotte Thiesson1,2.
Abstract
Calcineurin inhibitors have markedly reduced acute rejection rates in renal transplantation, thus significantly improved short-term outcome. The beneficial effects are, however, tampered by acute and chronic nephrotoxicity leading to interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy, which impairs long-term allograft survival. The mineralocorticoid hormone aldosterone induces fibrosis in numerous organs, including the kidney. Evidence from animal models suggests a beneficial effect of aldosterone antagonism in reducing calcineurin inhibitor-induced nephrotoxicity. This review summarizes current evidence of mineralocorticoid receptor antagonism in animal models of calcineurin inhibitor-induced nephrotoxicity and the results from studies of mineralocorticoid antagonism in renal transplant patients.Entities:
Keywords: IF/TA; aldosterone; cyclosporine A; fibrosis; mineralocorticoid; tacrolimus
Year: 2017 PMID: 29226122 PMCID: PMC5705552 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2017.00210
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Figure 1Calcineurin inhibitors induce afferent arteriolar vasoconstriction through an effect on both mediators of endothelial dysfunction and a direct stimulatory effect on the RAAS-system. Vasoconstriction leads to reduced renal blood flow (acute CNI nephrotoxicity) and renal ischemia, which ultimately leads to inflammation and fibrosis (chronic CNI nephrotoxicity). The latter is further induced by a direct stimulatory effect on the major pro-fibrotic cytokine TGF-β. Simplified from Naesens et al. (3). CNI, calcineurin inhibitor; NO, nitric oxide; ET1, endothelin 1; RAAS, renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system; TGF-β, transforming growth factor β; ROS, reactive oxygen species; IF/TA, interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy.
Figure 2Aldosterone induces vasoconstriction via MR in vascular smooth muscle cells and through reduced bioavailability of nitric oxide. Also, aldosterone stimulates the formation of ROS further worsened by vasoconstriction. Activation of pro-inflammatory transcription factors as well as the direct stimulation of cytokines and leukocyte adhesion to the vessel wall leads to inflammation, which contributes to tissue fibrosis. A, aldosterone; MR, mineralocorticoid receptor; MRA, MR antagonist; ROS, reactive oxygen species; TGF-β, transforming growth factor β; PAI-1, plasminogen activator inhibitor 1; ET-1, endothelin 1; CTFG, colony transforming growth factor; ICAM-1, intercellular adhesion molecule 1; NFκβ, nuclear factor κβ; AP-1, activator protein 1.
Included animal studies.
| Reference | Acute/chronic nephrotoxicity (AN/CN) | Number of rats per group ( | Intervention | Duration | Renal blood flow | GFR | Blood pressure | Proteinuria | Histology | Biomarker altered |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| McAuley et al. ( | AN | 6 | Spiro 25 mg/kg/day | 14 days | NI | ↑ | NI | NI | Less tubular damage | NAG↓ |
| Nielsen et al. ( | AN | 7 | EPL 100 mg/kg/day | 21 days | ↑ | ↑ | ↓ | NI | Less hyaline vacuolization and vascular depositions | NI |
| Perez-Rojas et al. ( | AN/CN | 10/6 | Spiro 20 mg/kg/day | 7 days/21 days | ↑ | ↑ | NI | NI | NI | Prorenin↓, AT2↓, ETb↓ |
| Feria et al. ( | CN | 12 | Spiro 20 mg/kg/day | 21 days | NI | ↑ | → | → | Less fibrosis and arteriolopathy | TGFβ↓, collagen I↓, collagen IV↓, fibronectin↓, EGF↑ |
| Perez-Rojas et al. ( | CN | 7 | Spiro 20 mg/kg/day | 36 days | NI | ↑ | → | NI | Less fibrosis, arteriolar thickening, glomerular constriction, and apoptosis | Procaspase-3↓, TGFβ↓, KIM-1↓ |
| Macunluoglu et al. ( | CN | 8 | Spiro 20 mg/kg/day | 28 days | NI | ↑ | NI | → | Less fibrosis | TGFβ↓, PDGF↓ |
| Silva et al. ( | CN | 6 | Spiro 20 mg/kg/day | 35 days | NI | → | NI | → | No effect | NI |
| Waanders et al. ( | CN | 8 | Spiro 20 mg/kg/day | 12 weeks | NI | → | → | → | No effect | NI |
| Nielsen et al. ( | CN | 11 | EPL 100 mg/kg/day | 12 weeks | NI | ↑ | ↓ | NI | Less fibrosis, glomerulo-sclerosis, hyaline tubular casts, tubular dilatation, and hyaline arteriolopathy | E-cadherin↑ |
| Sun et al. ( | CN | 8 | EPL 100 mg/kg/day | 4 weeks | NI | → | NI | ↓ | Less fibrosis | Collagen I↓, TGFβ↓, PAI-1↓ |
The effect of mineralocorticoid receptor antagonism is indicated by (↑): increase (→): no change or (↓): decrease.
AN, acute calcineurin inhibitor (CNI) nephrotoxicity, CN, chronic CNI nephrotoxicity, Spiro, spironolactone; EPL, eplerenone; NI, not investigated; NAG, .
Included studies in renal transplant patients.
| Reference | Number of subjects | Intervention | Design | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bertocchio et al. ( | 31 | EPL 25 mg/day for 8 weeks | Prospective, open-label | No significant hyperkalemia |
| Medeiros et al. ( | 24 | EPL 25 mg/day for 24 months | Prospective, randomized, single-blind, placebo controlled | Stable kidney function |
| Tendency toward lower proteinuria and less fibrosis (NS) | ||||
| Gonzalez Monte et al. ( | 11 | Spiro 25 mg/day for 6 months | Prospective, open-label | Significant reduction of proteinuria |
| Ojeda-Cervantes et al. ( | 20 | Spiro 25 mg/day 24 h prior to kidney transplantation and 3 days after | Randomized, double blind, placebo controlled | Reduced urinary H2O2 |
| No difference in tubular damage markers | ||||
EPL, eplerenone; Spiro, spironolactone; NS, not significant; H.