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Treatment of Unruptured Cerebral Aneurysms with the Mineralocorticoid Receptor Blocker Eplerenone—Pilot Study

Authors :
Takeshi Miyamoto
Junichiro Satomi
Yasuhisa Kanematsu
Kohei Nakajima
Nobuhisa Matsushita
Tomoya Kinouchi
Masafumi Harada
Kazuyuki Kuwayama
Tadashi Yamaguchi
Hideo Mure
Yoshihiro Okayama
Takashi Abe
Keiko T. Kitazato
Kenji Yagi
Yoshiteru Tada
Kenji Shimada
Shinji Nagahiro
Masaaki Korai
Source :
Journal of Stroke and Cerebrovascular Diseases. 27:2134-2140
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2018.

Abstract

Background Currently there are no pharmacological therapies for patients with unruptured cerebral aneurysms. Elsewhere we showed that the mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist eplerenone prevented the formation of cerebral aneurysms in our ovariectomized hypertensive aneurysm rat model. The current pilot study evaluated whether it can be used to prevent the growth and rupture of cerebral aneurysms in hypertensive patients. Methods Between August 2011 and May 2014, we enrolled 82 patients with 90 aneurysms in an open-label uncontrolled clinical trial. All provided prior informed consent for inclusion in this study, and all were treated with eplerenone (25-100 mg/d). The primary end points of our study were the rupture and enlargement of the cerebral aneurysms. Results Of the 82 patients, 80 (88 unruptured aneurysms) were followed for a mean of 21.3 months (153.4 aneurysm-years); 12 patients (15.0%) permanently discontinued taking the drug. One month after the start of eplerenone administration and throughout the follow-up period, eplerenone kept the blood pressure within the normal range. Most notably, no aneurysms smaller than 9 mm ruptured or enlarged. However, of 2 large thrombosed aneurysms, 1 enlarged and the other ruptured. The overall annual rupture rate was .65%; it was 13.16% for aneurysms larger than 10 mm; the overall annual rate for reaching the primary end points was 1.30%. Conclusion Our observations suggest that eplerenone may help to prevent the growth and rupture of unruptured cerebral aneurysms smaller than 9 mm. To assess its potential long-term clinical benefits, large clinical trials are needed.

Details

ISSN :
10523057
Volume :
27
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Stroke and Cerebrovascular Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....993e200e0ad3eaac775e00553d455ecf