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A randomized controlled trial of the effect of spironolactone on left ventricular mass in hemodialysis patients

Authors :
Sebastian Toncar
Thomas Schmiedeke
Thomas Vogl
Nils Pollak
Michael Leidig
Beatrix Büschges-Seraphin
Marianne Kleinert
Cord Schneuzer
Christina Klaeffling
Clemens Grupp
Christoph Blaser
Susanne Berweck
Rüdiger Götz
Stefan Fischer
Andreas Schmitt
Bettina Wirth
Frank Breunig
Markus Ketteler
Hendrick Witsch
Frank Strutz
Uwe Malzahn
Oliver Jung
Markus Schneider
Julian Gebhardt
Jan Goßmann
Mohamed Marwan
Holger Naujoks
Mara Dörken
L. Schramm
Ewelina Sobkowiak
Michael Heckel
Joanna Harazny
Arnfried Klingbeil
J Zimmermann
Maria Moritz
Heribert Fink
Raoul Zeltner
Patrick Biggar
Rolf Janka
Ahmet Cakmak
Stefan Büttner
Christoph Betz
Fabian Hammer
Heike Schneider
Sarah Rudolf
Beate Schamberger
Imke Reimer
Claudius Kleinert
Michael Brunner
Sabine Schütterle
Susanne Schwedler
Vera Krane
Thorsten Klink
Sophie Richter
Christian Ritter
Markus Schöffauer
Tilo Freiwald
Helmut Geiger
Ulrike Raff
Benjamin-Florian Koch
Renate Hammerstingl
Thomas Bochannek
Joachim Hoyer
Wolfgang Freisinger
Paul Würmell
Daniel Sollinger
Vladimir Vasiljuk
Michael Schmid
Clemens Reichert
Jens Lutz
Stefan Störk
Reinhard Schneider
Andrea Heyd-Schramm
Thomas Döltz
Brigitte Moye
Kai-Olaf Netzer
Kai-Uwe Eckardt
Jurij Ribel
Christoph Wanner
Julian Donhauser
Thorsten Walther
Julia Weinmann-Menke
Judith Kosowski
Source :
Kidney International. 95:983-991
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2019.

Abstract

Mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists have beneficial effects on left ventricular remodeling, cardiac fibrosis, and arrhythmia in heart failure, but efficacy and safety in dialysis patients is less clear. We evaluated the effect of spironolactone on left ventricular mass (LVM), an independent predictor of all-cause and cardiovascular mortality, in hemodialysis patients. In this placebo-controlled, parallel-group trial, 97 hemodialysis patients (23% female; mean age 60.3 years) were randomized to spironolactone 50 mg once daily (n=50) or placebo (n=47). The primary efficacy endpoint was change in LVM index (LVMi) from baseline to 40 weeks as determined by cardiac magnetic resonance imaging. Safety endpoints were development of hyperkalemia and change in residual renal function. There was no significant change in LVMi in participants randomized to spironolactone compared to placebo (-2.86±11.87 vs. 0.41±10.84 g/m2). There was also no difference in the secondary outcomes of mean 24-hour systolic or diastolic ambulatory blood pressure, left ventricular ejection fraction, 6-minute walk test distance, or New York Heart Association functional class. Moderate hyperkalemia (pre-dialysis potassium levels of 6.0-6.5 mmol/L) was more frequent with spironolactone treatment (155 vs. 80 events), but severe hyperkalemia (≥6.5 mmol/L) was not (14 vs. 24 events). Changes in residual urine volume and measured glomerular filtration rate did not differ between groups. There were no deaths in the spironolactone group and 4 deaths in the placebo group. Thus, treatment with 50 mg spironolactone did not change left ventricular mass index, cardiac function, or blood pressure in hemodialysis patients. Spironolactone increased the frequency of moderate hyperkalemia, but did not increase severe hyperkalemia.

Details

ISSN :
00852538
Volume :
95
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Kidney International
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....adc8f0e24798b6d023a9deb6f47218d3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.kint.2018.11.025