1. Proteinuria lowering needs a multifactorial and individualized approach to halt progression of renal disease.
- Author
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de Jong, Paul E. and Navis, Gerjan
- Subjects
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PROTEINURIA , *ACE inhibitors , *GLOMERULAR filtration rate , *CHRONIC kidney failure , *KIDNEY diseases , *PREVENTION - Abstract
This Practice Point commentary discusses the implementation of an intensive, multifactorial intervention in patients who had proteinuria >3 g/day despite treatment with angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitors. In their 'Remission Clinic' in Bergamo, Italy, Ruggenenti et al. implemented an individual titration regimen using ramipril 5-10 mg/day, losartan 50-100 mg/day, verapamil 80-120 mg/day and atorvastatin 10-20 mg/day in successive steps, aiming for a low blood pressure target of <120/80 mmHg and a proteinuria target of <0.3 g/day. They found that patients treated in the Remission Clinic had a much slower decline in estimated glomerular filtration rate than a matched historical reference group treated with 1.25-5.00 mg ramipril (diastolic blood pressure goal <90 mmHg). Only 3.6% of Remission Clinic patients reached end-stage renal disease, compared with 30.4% of the historical controls. No information was provided on the individual responses to the different titration steps; therefore, the contributions of the specific components of the regimen towards the therapeutic benefit cannot be established. The data do, however, encourage an individualized and more active approach to preventing end-stage renal disease in individuals with proteinuric chronic kidney disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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