| Literature DB >> 32872730 |
Jung Hwan Park1, Yong-Il Jo1, Jong-Ho Lee1.
Abstract
The prevalence of chronic kidney disease (CKD) is increasing worldwide. Although hyperuricemia has been associated with CKD in many studies, it remains controversial whether this is the cause or the result of decreased renal function. Recent observational studies of healthy populations and patients with CKD have reported that uric acid (UA) has an independent role in the development or progression of CKD. Experimental studies have shown several potential mechanisms by which hyperuricemia may cause or promote CKD. However, other reports have indicated an association between hypouricemia and CKD. This opposing effect is hypothesized to occur because UA is a major antioxidant in human plasma and is associated with oxidative stress. In this article, we discuss the potential association between UA imbalance and CKD and how they can be treated.Entities:
Keywords: Hyperuricemia; Hypouricemia; Kidney; Uric acid
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32872730 PMCID: PMC7652664 DOI: 10.3904/kjim.2020.410
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean J Intern Med ISSN: 1226-3303 Impact factor: 2.884
Renal urate transporters and associated conditions
| Transporter | Gene | Location | Function | Gene mutation result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Urate transporter 1 (URAT1) | SLC22A12 | Luminal membrane of proximal renal tubule | Reabsorbs glomerular-filtrated UA | Hypouricemia |
| Glucose transporter 9 (GLUT9) | SLC2A9 | Basolateral membrane of proximal renal tubule | Allows intracellular UA to exit through the basolateral side of the cells | Hypouricemia |
| ATP-binding cassette transporter subfamily G member 2 (ABCG2) | ABCG2 | Luminal membrane of proximal renal tubule | UA excretion | Hyperuricemia |
| Sodium-dependent phosphate transporter 1 (NPT1) | SLC17A1 | Luminal membrane of proximal renal tubule | UA excretion | Hyperuricemia |
| NPT4 | SLC17A3 | Luminal me m b r a ne of proximal renal tubule | UA excretion | Hyperuricemia |
UA, uric acid.
Observational studies of hyperuricemia and CKD
| Country | Population | Design (follow-up yr) | Finding | Study |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Japan | 6,403 Adults, healthy | Prospective cohort (6.75) | SUA >6.0 mg/dL was an independent predictor of ESRD in women (HR, 5.77) | Iseki et al. (2004) [ |
| Thailand | 3,499 Adults, healthy | Prospective cohort (12) | SUA >6.3 mg/dL associated with risk of development of decreased kidney function (OR, 1.82) | Domrongkitchaiporn et al. (2005) [ |
| USA | 5,808 Adults, healthy | Prospective cohort (6.9) | SUA was strongly associated with prevalence but weakly with progression of CKD (OR, 1.49) | Chonchol et al. (2007) [ |
| Austria | 21,457 Adults, healthy | Prospective cohort (7) | SUA >7 mg/dL increased CKD risk (OR, 1.74), >9.0 mg/dL (OR, 3.12) | Obermayr et al. (2008) [ |
| USA | 675 Type 1 DM | Cross-sectional | SUA in the high-normal range is associated with impaired renal function | Rosolowsky et al. (2008) [ |
| USA | 177,570 Adults, healthy | Prospective cohort (25.7) | Higher quartile of SUA conferred 2.14-fold increased risk of ESRD | Hsu et al. (2009) [ |
| Italy | 900 Adults, healthy | Prospective cohort (5) | Each 1 mg/dL increase in SUA increased risk of reduced eGFR (HR, 1.28) | Bellomo et al. (2010) [ |
| Japan | 7,078 Adults, healthy | Prospective cohort (5) | SUA level is an independent predictor of CKD onset (OR, 1.15) | Sonoda et al. (2011) [ |
| Italy | 1,449 Type 2 DM | Prospective cohort (5) | 1-SD increment in SUA was associated with a 21% increased risk of CKD. | Zoppini et al. (2012) [ |
| Japan | 803 Adults, CKD stage 3–4 | Retrospective cohort (4) Propensity score analysis | UA >6.5 mg/dL increased ESRD risk (HR, 2.39) | Uchida et al. (2015) [ |
| USA | 627 Children, CKD (median GFR 58.1 mL/min/1.73 m2) | Prospective cohort (5) | SUA >7.5 mg/dL is an independent risk factor for faster progression of CKD in children and adolescents | Rodenbach et al. (2015) [ |
| Korea | 2,042 Adults, CKD stage 1–5 | Prospective cohort (2.12) | Each 1 mg/dL increase in SUA in- creased the risk of progression to renal failure (HR, 1.277) | Oh et al. (2019) [ |
CKD, chronic kidney disease; SUA, serum uric acid; ESRD, end-stage renal disease; HR, hazard ratio; OR, odds ratio; DM, diabetes mellitus; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate; SD, standard deviation; UA, uric acid; GFR, glomerular filtration rate.
Clinical trials of UA-lowering therapy on CKD
| Country | Population (follow-up yr) | Drug, dosing per day | Finding | Study |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| China | 54 CKD; serum creatinine 1.35–4.5 mg/dL (1) | Allopurinol, 100-300 mg | Allopurinol helps preserve kidney function during 12 months of therapy compared with controls | Siu et al. (2006) [ |
| Spain | 113 CKD 3 (2) | Allopurinol, 100 mg | Slows down the progression of renal disease | Goicoechea et al. (2010) [ |
| Iran | 40 type 2 DM; serum creatinine <3.0 mg/dL (4 months) | Allopurinol, 100 mg | Reduced proteinuria, no difference in serum creatinine | Momeni et al. (2010) [ |
| China | 40 IgA nephropathy; serum creatinine <3 mg/dL (0.5) | Allopurinol, 100–300 mg | No difference was found in eGFR | Shi et al. (2012) [ |
| India | 93 CKD 3, 4 (0.5) | Febuxostat, 40 mg | Slowed the decline in eGFR compared to placebo | Sircar et al. (2015) [ |
| Japan | 467 CKD 3 (2) | Febuxostat, 20–40 mg | No significant difference in mean eGFR slope | Kimura et al. (2018) [ |
| Korea | 141 CKD 3 (5) | Febuxostat, 20–80 mg, | Febuxostat reduced the risk of renal disease progression compared to control | Lee et al. (2019) [ |
| China | 152 CKD 2-3 (0.5) | Febuxostat, 20–40 mg | Febuxostat, superior in delaying renal impairment progression compared to allopurinol | Zhang et al. (2019) [ |
| Allopurinol, 100–200 mg |
UA, uric acid; CKD, chronic kidney disease; DM, diabetes mellitus; IgA, immunoglobulin A; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate.