| Literature DB >> 34437444 |
Ping-Hsun Lu1,2, Min-Chien Yu1,2, Meng-Jiun Wei1, Ko-Lin Kuo3,4.
Abstract
Uremic toxins (UTs) are mainly produced by protein metabolized by the intestinal microbiota and converted in the liver or by mitochondria or other enzymes. The accumulation of UTs can damage the intestinal barrier integrity and cause vascular damage and progressive kidney damage. Together, these factors lead to metabolic imbalances, which in turn increase oxidative stress and inflammation and then produce uremia that affects many organs and causes diseases including renal fibrosis, vascular disease, and renal osteodystrophy. This article is based on the theory of the intestinal-renal axis, from bench to bedside, and it discusses nonextracorporeal therapies for UTs, which are classified into three categories: medication, diet and supplement therapy, and complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) and other therapies. The effects of medications such as AST-120 and meclofenamate are described. Diet and supplement therapies include plant-based diet, very low-protein diet, probiotics, prebiotics, synbiotics, and nutraceuticals. The research status of Chinese herbal medicine is discussed for CAM and other therapies. This review can provide some treatment recommendations for the reduction of UTs in patients with chronic kidney disease.Entities:
Keywords: chronic kidney disease; complementary and alternative medicine; conventional medical therapy; diet control; dietary supplement; uremic toxin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34437444 PMCID: PMC8402511 DOI: 10.3390/toxins13080573
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Figure 1Proposed mechanism of UT generation and therapeutic methods. GI, gastrointestinal; OAT, organic anion transporter; SULT, sulfotransferase; UT, uremic toxin.
Medications for the control of UTs.
| Intervention | Route, Dosage and Frequency | Author/Year | Mechanism/Usage | Study Design | Subjects | Subject Number | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clinical Studies | |||||||
| Acarbose | Oral, 100 mg, TID | Evenepoel et al., 2006 [ | Changes in bacterial amino acid metabolism | Clinical trial | Healthy people | 9 | PCS ↘ |
| AST-120 | Oral, 2.7 to 9 g/day | Chen et al., 2019 [ | UT adsorbent | Meta-analysis | Patients with CKD | 3349 | IS ↘ |
| L-carnitine | i.v., 20 mg/kg, 3 times/week | Fatouros et al., 2010 [ | Antioxidation | Clinical trial | Patients undergoing HD | 12 | MDA ↘ |
| Folate | Oral, 10 mg, QD | Trimarchi et al., 2002 [ | Metabolic degradation of UT | RCT | Patients undergoing HD | 62 | Hcy ↘ |
| Folate and Methylcobami | i.v. methylcobalami 500 µg, 3 times/week and oral folate 15 mg, QD | Koyama et al., 2010 [ | Metabolic degradation of UT | RCT | Patients undergoing HDs | 40 | ADMA ↘, Hcy ↘ |
| Ketoacid and LPD | Oral, 1 pill/5 kg, QD | Marzocco et al., 2013 [ | Decreased amino acid degradation/protein carbamylation | RCT | CKD stage 3 adults | 32 | IS ↘ |
| Ketoacid and LPD | Oral, 0.1 g/kg, TID | Garibotto et al., 2018 [ | Decreased amino acid degradation/protein carbamylation | RCT | Patients with CKD | 17 | Urea ↘ |
| Reduced glutathione | Oral, 400 mg, TID | Wang et al., 2016 [ | Antioxidation | RCT | Patients undergoing HD | 150 | IL-6 ↘, |
| Animal Studies | |||||||
| AST-120 | Oral, 8% | Sato et al., 2017 [ | UT adsorbent | Animal | Adenine-induced CKD mice | 24 | IS ↘, PCS ↘ |
| L-carnitine | i.p., 500 mg/kg, QD | Sener et al., 2004 [ | Antioxidation | Animal | Right nephrectomy rats | 16 | BUN ↘, Cr ↘, MDA ↘ |
| Cilastatin | i.v., 200 mg/kg, once | Huo et al., 2019 [ | OAT inhibitor | Animal | Imipenem-induced nephrotoxicity rabbits | 4 | BUN ↘, Cr ↘ |
| cyclosporine | i.v., 3 mg/kg, once | Lemoine et al., 2015 [ | Antioxidation | Animal | I/R mice | 22 | BUN ↘, |
| Enalapril | Oral, 12.6 mg/kg, QD | Marek et al., 2018 [ | ACEI, increased glomerular filtration, and urine output | Animal | Wistar rats | 27 | TMAO ↘ |
| meclofenamate | i.v., 10 mg/kg, TID | Saigo et al., 2014 [ | SULT inhibitors | Animal | Renal I/R rats | 9 | BUN ↘, Cr ↘, IS ↘ |
| Probenecid | i.v., 50 mg/kg, once | Huo et al., 2019, [ | OAT inhibitor | Animal | Imipenem-induced nephrotoxicity rabbits | 12 | BUN ↘, Cr ↘ |
↘, decrease; ACEI, angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor; ADMA, asymmetric dimethylarginine; BUN, blood urea nitrogen; CKD, chronic kidney disease; Cr, creatinine; Hcy, homocysteine; HD, hemodialysis; i.p., intraperitoneal; i.v., intravenous; I/R, ischemia/reperfusion; IL-6, interleukin-6; IS, indoxyl sulfate; LPD, low protein diet; MDA, malondialdehyde; OAT, organic anion transporter; PCS, p-cresyl sulfate; QD, quaque die; RCT, randomized controlled trial; SULT, sulfotransferase; TID, ter in die; TMAO, trimethylamine N-oxide; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor alpha; UA, uric acid.
Diet treatments for the control of UTs.
| Intervention | Route, Dosage and Frequency | Author/Year | Mechanism/Usage | Study Design | Subjects | Subject Number | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clinical Studies | |||||||
| Prebiotics—OF-IN | Oral, 10 g, BID | Meijers et al., 2010 [ | Modulating intestinal microbiota | Open-label phase I/II study | Patients undergoing HD | 22 | PCS ↘ |
| Probiotics: | Oral, 2 capsules, TID | Ranganathan et al., 2010 [ | Modulating intestinal microbiota | RCT | Patients with CKD stages 3 and 4 | 46 | BUN ↘, Cr ↘, UA ↘ |
| Probiotics: | Oral, 3–12 × 109 CFU/day | Taki et al., 2005 [ | Modulating intestinal microbiota | Case series | Patients undergoing HD | 27 | Hcy ↘, IS ↘ |
| SCFA: sodium propionate | Oral, 1 g, QD | Marzocco et al., 2018 [ | Anti-inflammation and antioxidation | Clinical trial | Patients undergoing HD | 20 | IS ↘, MDA ↘, PCS ↘ |
| Synbiotic: | Oral, 1 pack, TID | Nakabayashi el et al., 2011 [ | Modulating intestinal microbiota | Clinical trial or case series | Patients undergoing HD | 9 | p-Cresol ↘ |
| Vegetarian | Oral | Kandouz et al., 2016 [ | Improvement of metabolic acidosis, modification of intestinal microbiota | Cohort | Patients in hemodiafiltration | 138 | IS ↘, PCS ↘, Urea ↘ |
| Vitamin D | Oral, 300,000 IU, QD | Kumar et al., 2017 [ | Anti-inflammation | RCT | Patients with nondiabetic CKD and vitamin D deficiency | 120 | IL-6 ↘, UA ↘ |
| Animal Studies | |||||||
| Diet® k/d® | Oral, 1.6 RER, QD | Hall et al., 2018 [ | Anti-inflammation | Animal | CKD dogs | 36 | BUN ↘, Cr ↘, SDMA ↘ |
| Lingonberry | Oral, 5% | Madduma Hewageet al., 2020 [ | Anti-inflammation | Animal | HFD-induced kidney injury mice | 30 | BUN ↘, Cr ↘, IL-6 ↘, TNF-α ↘ |
| MitoQ | i.v., 4 mg/kg, once | Hu et al., 2018 [ | Antioxidation through reducing mitochondrial ROS | Animal | I/R mice | 24 | Cr ↘, IL-1β ↘, IL-6 ↘, TNF-α ↘ |
| Soluble Fiber and Omega-3 | Oral, 3666 kcal/kg, QD | Ephraim et al., 2020 [ | Modulating intestinal microbiota | Animal | Dogs aged older than 7 years | 36 | phenolic UTs ↘, SDMA ↘ |
↘, decrease; BUN, blood urea nitrogen; BID, bis in die; CFU, colony-forming units; CKD, chronic kidney disease; Cr, creatinine; Hcy, homocysteine; HD, hemodialysis; HFD, high-flux dialysis; I/R, ischemia/reperfusion; IL-1β, interleukin-1 beta; IL-6, interleukin 6; IS, indoxyl sulfate; IU, International unit; i.v., intravenous; MDA, malondialdehyde; MitoQ, mitoquinone; OF-IN, oligofructose-enriched inulin; PCS, p-cresyl sulfate; QD, quaque die; RER, resting energy requirement; RCT, randomized controlled trial; SCFA, short-chain fatty acids; SDMA, symmetric dimethylarginine; UA, uric acids; UTs, uremic toxins.
CAM treatments for the control of UTs.
| Intervention | Route, Dosage, and Frequency | Author/Year | Mechanism/Usage | Study Design | Subjects | Subject Number | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clinical Studies | |||||||
| Oral, 1 capsule, BID | Moreillon et al., 2013 [ | Anti-inflammation, inhibition of NF-Κb and MAPK | RCT | Patients with CKD | 16 | IL-6 ↘ | |
| UCG | Oral, 5 g, TID and 10 g HS | Zheng et al., 2017 [ | Anti-inflammation and antifibrosis | RCT | Patients with CKD | 292 | Cr ↘ |
| Acupuncture | External, LI4, ST36 and KI3, 1 time/week | Yu et al., 2017 [ | Improving renal local microcirculation | RCT | Patients with CKD | 59 | Cr ↘ |
| Moxibustion | External, 0.5~7 sessions/week | Zhou et al., 2020 [ | Dilating local renal capillaries, alleviating kidney podocyte injury | MA | Patients with CKD | 1571 | BUN ↘, Cr ↘ |
| Animal Studies | |||||||
| DFD | Gastric gavage, 2.5 g/kg, QD | Tu et al., 2014 [ | Inhibiting apoptosis by blocking TGF-b1-JNK | Animal | Adenine-induced renal injury rats | 27 | BUN ↘, Cr ↘, |
| DHI and salvianolic acids | Extracorporeal, DHI 4.16 mL/kg or LA 24.69 mg/kg, once | Li et al., 2019 [ | Protein-binding competitors | Animal | CKD rats with accumulated IS and pCS | 16 | Enhanced dialysis removal of IS and pCS |
| UCG | Gastric gavage, 5 g/kg, QD | Huang et al., 2014 [ | Antifibrosis, regulation of ECM degradation | Animal | Adenine and UUO-induced renal failure rats | 26 | BUN ↘, Cr ↘, |
| ZDW | i.p., 2 g/kg, once | Hsu et al., 2014 [ | Attenuation of apoptosis through limiting of caspase-3 activation | Animal | Gentamicin-induced renal injury | 12 | BUN ↘Cr ↘ |
| ZDW | Embryo exposure, 100 ppm, once | Lu et al., 2020 [ | Suppression of proinflammatory gene expression | Animal | AA-intoxicated zebrafish embryos | 150 | tnf-α ↘ |
| Catechin | Oral, 100 mg/kg, QD | Korish et al., 2008 [ | Antioxidation | Animal | 5/6 nephrectomy rats | 40 | ADMA ↘ |
| Cyanidin-3-O-glucoside (C3G) | i.p., 20 mg/kg, QD | Qin et al., 2018 [ | Antioxidation | Animal | db/db mice with DN | 60 | BUN ↘, Cr ↘ |
| EGCG | i.p., 50 mg/kg, QD | Wang et al., 2015 [ | Anti-inflammation and antioxidation through inhibition of the NF-κB signaling pathway and activation of the Nrf2-Keap1 pathway | Animal | UUO mice | 24 | BUN ↘, Cr ↘ |
| Gypenoside (GP) | i.v., 50 mg/kg, once | Ye et al., 2016 [ | Attenuating inflammatory and oxidative stress by inhibiting ERK signaling | Animal | I/R-induced renal injury mice | 30 | BUN ↘, Cr ↘, IL-1β ↘, IL-6 ↘, |
| Huangkui capsule | Gastric gavage, 0.75 g/kg, QD | Cai et al., 2017 [ | Inhibition of the NADPH oxidase/ROS/ERK pathway | Animal | Adenine-induced CRF Rats | 18 | BUN ↘, Cr ↘ |
| Huangkui capsule | Gastric gavage, 0.675 g/kg, QD | Wang et al., 2019 [ | Inhibition of the transformation of Trp to indole | Animal | 5/6 nephrectomy Rats | 21 | IS ↘ |
| Leonurine (LEO) | i.v., 50 mg/kg, QD | Xu et al., 2014 [ | Inhibition of inflammatory and oxidative stress through downregulation of NF-kB | Animal | LPS-induced renal injury mice | 120 | BUN ↘, Cr ↘, |
| Ligustrazine (LIG) | i.p., 80 mg/kg, once | Feng et al., 2011 [ | Downregulation of oxidative stress and apoptosis, decrease in neutrophil infiltration | Animal | I/R-induced renal injury mice | 48 | MDA ↘, TNF-α ↘ |
| Notoginsenoside R1 (NR1) | i.p., 80 mg/kg, once | Liu et al., 2010 [ | Blocking apoptosis and inflammatory response by suppressing p38 and NF-kB | Animal | I/R-induced renal injury rats | 24 | Cr ↘, TNF-α ↘ |
| Osthole | i.p., 40 mg/kg, once | Luo et al., 2016 [ | Abrogating inflammation by suppressing JAK2/STAT3 signaling, activating PI3K/Akt signaling | Animal | I/R-induced renal injury rats | 70 | BUN ↘, Cr ↘, IL-6 ↘, TNF-α ↘ |
| Paeoniflorin (PF) | i.p., 30 mg/kg, once | Liu et al., 2015 [ | Attenuation of inflammatory response by inhibiting CXCR3/CXCL | Animal | ConA-induced renal injury mice | 60 | BUN ↘, Cr ↘, |
| Resveratrol | Gastric Gavage, 1 mg/kg, QD | Chen et al., 2016 [ | Modulation of intestinal microbiota | Animal | ApoE(-/-) mice | 20 | TMAO ↘ |
| Tanshinone I | i.p., 120 mg/kg, QD | Feng et al., 2013 [ | Enhancement of AAI metabolism by induction of CYP1A | Animal | AAI-induced renal injury mice | 40 | BUN ↘, Cr ↘ |
| Rhubarb | Enema, 0.5 g, QD | Lu et al., 2015 [ | Antioxidation, anti-inflammation | Animal | 5/6 nephrectomy rats | 28 | Cr ↘, IS ↘ |
| Rhubarb | Enema, 2.12 g/kg, QD | Ji et al., 2020 [ | Modulation of intestinal microbiota, | Animal | 5/6 nephrectomy rats | 30 | IL-1β ↘, IL-6 ↘ |
| SkQR1 | i.p., 400 nmol/kg, once | Plotnikov et al., 2011 [ | Antioxidation | Animal | Glycerol-induced rhabdomyolysis rats | 36 | BUN ↘, MDA ↘ |
↘, decrease; AA, aristolochic acid; ADMA, asymmetric dimethylarginine; ApoE, apolipoprotein E; BID, bis in die; BUN, blood urea nitrogen; CKD, chronic kidney disease; ConA, concanavalin A; Cr, creatinine; CRF, chronic renal failure; CXCR3/CXCL, c-X-c motif chemokine receptor 3/C-X-C motif Chemokine ligand; CYP1A, cytochrome P450 1A; DFD, Dahuang Fuzi Decoction; DHI, Danhong injection; DN, diabetic nephropathy; ECM, extracellular matrix; EGCG, eepigallocatechin-3-gallate; ERK, extracellular signal-regulated kinase; HS, hora somni; i.p., intraperitoneal injection; I/R, ischemia/reperfusion; IL-1, interleukin-1; IL-1β, interleukin-1 beta; IL-6, interleukin-6; IS, indoxyl sulfate; JAK2/STAT3, Janus kinase 2/signal transducer and activator of transcription 3; LA, lithospermic acid; MA, meta-analysis; MAPK, mitogen-activated protein kinase; MDA, malondialdehyde; NADPH, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate; NFκB, nuclear factor kappa B; Nrf2-keap1, nuclear factor E2-related factor 2-Kelch-like ECH-associated protein 1; PCS, p-cresyl sulphate; PI3K/Akt, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Ak strain transforming; QD, quaque die; RCT, randomized controlled trial; ROS, reactive oxygen species; SkQR1, 10-(6′-plastoquinonyl) decylrhodamine; TGF β1-JNK, transforming growth factor-beta-1-c-Jun N-terminal kinase; TID, ter in die; TMAO, trimethylamine N-oxide; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor alpha; UA, uric acid; UCG, uremic clearance granule ; UUO, unilateral ureteral obstruction; ZDW, Zhibai Dihuang Wan.