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The Lancet | 1998

Renal function and requirement for dialysis in chronic nephropathy patients on long-term ramipril : REIN follow-up trial

Piero Ruggenenti; Annalisa Perna; Giulia Gherardi; Flavio Gaspari; Roberto Benini; Giuseppe Remuzzi

BACKGROUND The Ramipril Efficacy In Nephropathy (REIN) study found that in patients with chronic nephropathies and proteinuria of 3 g or more per 24 h, ramipril safely reduced the rate of decline of the glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and halved the combined risk of doubling of serum creatinine or end-stage renal failure (ESRF), as compared with placebo plus conventional antihypertensive drugs at the same level of blood pressure control. At the end of the core study patients continued on or shifted to ramipril and were formally enrolled into the REIN follow-up study. METHODS 97 patients entered the follow-up study. Patients originally randomised to ramipril continued with the same daily dose (n=51), whereas those originally on placebo plus conventional antihypertensive drugs switched to ramipril after the first visit of the follow-up study (n=46). Ramipril (1.25 to 5.00 mg/day) and conventional antihypertensive therapy were targeted at achieving diastolic blood pressure under 90 mm Hg. The main efficacy variables were GFR decline and ESRF (need for dialysis). Analysis was by intention to treat. FINDINGS During the follow-up study the mean rate of GFR decline per month decreased from 0.44 (SD 0.54) mL/min per 1.73 m2 in the core study to 0.10 (0.50) mL/min per 1.73 m2 in patients originally randomised to ramipril (p=0.017), and from 0.81 (1.12) to 0.14 (0.87) mL/min per 1.73 m2 in those originally randomised to placebo plus conventional antihypertensive therapy (p=0.017). At the final visit, mean absolute GFR values were 12 mL/min per 1.73 m2 higher (33% better) in patients randomised to ramipril than in those assigned placebo (n=26 and 17, respectively: 35.5 [19.0] vs 23.8 [9.4] mL/min per 1.73 m2, p=0.01). 19 of the patients originally on ramipril versus 35 switched from placebo to ramipril progressed to ESRF (p=0.027) during the whole observation period; of these, six (8%) versus 14 (16%) reached that endpoint during the follow-up study; and the risk ratios were 1.86 (95% CI 1.07-3.26) over the whole observation period and 2.95 (1.13-7.68) during follow-up. Beyond follow-up at month 36, the incidence of ESRF was zero in patients originally randomised to ramipril but 30% in patients on placebo plus conventional antihypertensive therapy. INTERPRETATION In patients with chronic nephropathy and high risk of rapid progression to ESRF, ramipril reversed the tendency of GFR to decline with time. Moreover, a treatment period of sufficient duration (> or =36 months) eliminated the need for dialysis. Even patients previously treated with antihypertensive drugs other than angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitors benefited from shifting to ramipril.


BMJ | 1998

Cross sectional longitudinal study of spot morning urine protein:creatinine ratio, 24 hour urine protein excretion rate, glomerular filtration rate, and end stage renal failure in chronic renal disease in patients without diabetes

Piero Ruggenenti; Flavio Gaspari; Annalisa Perna; Giuseppe Remuzzi

abstract Objective: To evaluate whether the protein:creatinine ratio in spot morning urine samples is a reliable indicator of 24 hour urinary protein excretion and predicts the rate of decline of glomerular filtration rate and progression to end stage renal failure in non-diabetic patients with chronic nephropathy. Design: Cross sectional correlation between the ratio and urinary protein excretion rate. Univariate and multivariate analysis of baseline predictors, including the ratio and 24 hour urinary protein, of decline in glomerular filtration rate and end stage renal failure in the long term. Setting: Research centre in Italy. Subjects: 177 non-diabetic outpatients with chronic renal disease screened for participation in the ramipril efficacy in nephropathy study. Main outcome measures: Rate of decline in filtration rate evaluated by repeated measurements of unlabelled iohexol plasma clearance and rate of progression to renal failure. Results: Protein:creatinine ratio was significantly correlated with absolute and log transformed 24 hour urinary protein values (P=0.0001 and P<0.0001, respectively.) Ratios also had high predictive value for rate of decline of the glomerular filtration rate (univariate P=0.0003, multivariate P=0.004) and end stage renal failure (P=0.002 and P=0.04). Baseline protein:creatinine ratios and rate of decline of the glomerular filtration rate were also significantly correlated (P<0.0005). In the lowest third of the protein:creatinine ratio (<1.7) there was 3% renal failure compared with 21.2% in the highest third (>2.7) (P<0.05). Conclusions: Protein:creatinine ratio in spot morning urine samples is a precise indicator of proteinuria and a reliable predictor of progression of disease in non-diabetic patients with chronic nephropathies and represents a simple and inexpensive procedure in establishing severity of renal disease and prognosis. Key messages The protein:creatinine ratio measured in spot morning urine samples is a simple and reliable indicator of 24 hour urinary protein excretion rate and can therefore be used to quantify proteinuria without the need for timed urine collection Spot morning urinary protein:creatinine ratio is the strongest baseline predictor of progression of renal disease in non-diabetic patients with chronic nephropathies Compared with 24 hour urinary protein excretion rate, the spot morning ratio is an even more reliable predictor of decline in glomerular filtration rate and progression to end stage renal failure and represents a simple and inexpensive procedure in the determination of severity of renal disease and prognosis


American Journal of Transplantation | 2004

Performance of Different Prediction Equations for Estimating Renal Function in Kidney Transplantation

Flavio Gaspari; Silvia Ferrari; Nadia Stucchi; Emmanuel Centemeri; Fabiola Carrara; Marisa Pellegrino; Giulia Gherardi; Eliana Gotti; Giuseppe Segoloni; Maurizio Salvadori; Paolo Rigotti; Umberto Valente; Donato Donati; Silvio Sandrini; Vito Sparacino; Giuseppe Remuzzi; Norberto Perico

Numerous formulas have been developed to estimate renal function from biochemical, demographic and anthropometric data. Here we compared renal function derived from 12 published prediction equations with glomerular filtration rate (GFR) measurement by plasma iohexol clearance as reference method in a group of 81 renal transplant recipients enrolled in the Mycophenolate Mofetil Steroid Sparing (MY.S.S.) trial. Iohexol clearances and prediction equations were carried out in all patients at months 6, 9 and 21 after surgery. All equations showed a tendency toward GFR over‐estimation: Walser and MDRD equations gave the best performance, however not more than 45% of estimated values were within ±10% error. These formulas showed also the lowest bias and the highest precision: 0.5 and 9.2 mL/min/1.73 m2 (Walser), 2.7 and 10.4 mL/min/1.73 m2 (MDRD) in predicting GFR. A significantly higher rate of GFR decline ranging from −5.0 mL/min/1.73 m2/year (Walser) to −7.4 mL/min/1.73 m2/year (Davis–Chandler) was estimated by all the equations as compared with iohexol clearance (−3.0 mL/min/1.73 m2/year). The 12 prediction equations do not allow a rigorous assessment of renal function in kidney transplant recipients. In clinical trials of kidney transplantation, graft function should be preferably monitored using a reference method of GFR measurement, such as iohexol plasma clearance.


Transplantation | 1992

Daily renal hypoperfusion induced by cyclosporine in patients with renal transplantation

Norberto Perico; Piero Ruggenenti; Flavio Gaspari; Lidia Mosconi; Ariela Benigni; Carmen S. Amuchastegui; Fabio Gasparini; Giuseppe Remuzzi

A variety of side effects are associated with the use of cyclosporine, the most relevant of which remains the renal toxicity. We did parallel studies on cyclosporine pharmacokinetics and renal function in patients who had a recent kidney transplant and were given cyclosporine as a part of their immunosuppressive therapy. Seven consecutive renal transplant patients were studied at the end of a month of treatment while on different oral cyclosporine doses (5, 3.5, 2.5, or 1.5 mg/kg, twice a day, respectively). Cyclosporine pharmacokinetics profiles and renal function parameters (GFR and renal plasma flow [RPF], as inulin and p-amino hippurate clearances, respectively) were determined before and over a 12-hr period after each single dose of cyclosporine. Plasma levels and urinary excretion rate of endothelin were also studied before and after the highest cyclosporine dose (5 mg/kg). Mean trough levels, area under the curve values, and maximum concentration of blood cyclosporine were comparable after 5 and 3.5 mg/kg cyclosporine and decreased in a dose-dependent manner after the lower doses (2.5 and 1.5 mg/kg). In the same patients GFR declined on average 63%, 53%, 35%, and 18%, 2-4 hr after maximum cyclosporine concentration was reached. As blood levels of cyclosporine returned to trough, GFR progressively increased to baseline. Similar results were found for RPF; 5 mg/kg cyclosporine did not modify endothelin plasma levels. By contrast, urinary excretion of the peptide increased significantly (P less than 0.01) in the 6 hr that followed cyclosporine administration and returned within the normal range in the subsequent 6 hr. Following each oral administration of cyclosporine, 2-4 hr after peak blood concentration was reached, patients showed renal hypoperfusion, transient and rapidly reversible. This was associated with an increased urinary endothelin excretion rate that was also transient. It is speculated that an excessive renal synthesis of endothelin is the cause of the daily renal hypoperfusion observed in patients with renal transplants given cyclosporine.


The Lancet | 2013

Effect of longacting somatostatin analogue on kidney and cyst growth in autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ALADIN): a randomised, placebo-controlled, multicentre trial

Anna Caroli; Norberto Perico; Annalisa Perna; Luca Antiga; Paolo Brambilla; Antonio Pisani; Bianca Visciano; Massimo Imbriaco; Piergiorgio Messa; Roberta Cerutti; Mauro Dugo; Luca Cancian; Erasmo Buongiorno; Antonio De Pascalis; Flavio Gaspari; Fabiola Carrara; Nadia Rubis; Silvia Prandini; Andrea Remuzzi; Giuseppe Remuzzi; Piero Ruggenenti

BACKGROUND Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease slowly progresses to end-stage renal disease and has no effective therapy. A pilot study suggested that the somatostatin analogue octreotide longacting release (LAR) could be nephroprotective in this context. We aimed to assess the effect of 3 years of octreotide-LAR treatment on kidney and cyst growth and renal function decline in participants with this disorder. METHODS We did an academic, multicentre, randomised, single-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group trial in five hospitals in Italy. Adult (>18 years) patients with estimated glomerular filtration rate (GFR) of 40 mL/min per 1·73 m(2) or higher were randomly assigned (central allocation by phone with a computerised list, 1:1 ratio, stratified by centre, block size four and eight) to 3 year treatment with two 20 mg intramuscular injections of octreotide-LAR (n=40) or 0·9% sodium chloride solution (n=39) every 28 days. Study physicians and nurses were aware of the allocated group; participants and outcome assessors were masked to allocation. The primary endpoint was change in total kidney volume (TKV), measured by MRI, at 1 year and 3 year follow-up. Analyses were by modified intention to treat. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT00309283. FINDINGS Recruitment was between April 27, 2006, and May 12, 2008. 38 patients in the octreotide-LAR group and 37 patients in the placebo group had evaluable MRI scans at 1 year follow-up, at this timepoint, mean TKV increased significantly less in the octreotide-LAR group (46·2 mL, SE 18·2) compared with the placebo group (143·7 mL, 26·0; p=0·032). 35 patients in each group had evaluable MRI scans at 3 year follow-up, at this timepoint, mean TKV increase in the octreotide-LAR group (220·1 mL, 49·1) was numerically smaller than in the placebo group (454·3 mL, 80·8), but the difference was not significant (p=0·25). 37 (92·5%) participants in the octreotide-LAR group and 32 (82·1%) in the placebo group had at least one adverse event (p=0·16). Participants with serious adverse events were similarly distributed in the two treatment groups. However, four cases of cholelithiasis or acute cholecystitis occurred in the octreotide-LAR group and were probably treatment-related. INTERPRETATION These findings provide the background for large randomised controlled trials to test the protective effect of somatostatin analogues against renal function loss and progression to end-stage kidney disease. FUNDING Polycystic Kidney Disease Foundation.


Diabetes Care | 2012

Glomerular Hyperfiltration and Renal Disease Progression in Type 2 Diabetes

Piero Ruggenenti; Esteban Porrini; Flavio Gaspari; Nicola Motterlini; Antonio Cannata; Fabiola Carrara; Claudia Cella; S. Ferrari; Nadia Stucchi; Aneliya Parvanova; Ilian Iliev; Alessandro Roberto Dodesini; Roberto Trevisan; Antonio Bossi; Jelka Zaletel; Giuseppe Remuzzi

OBJECTIVE To describe the prevalence and determinants of hyperfiltration (glomerular filtration rate [GFR] ≥120 mL/min/1.73 m2), GFR decline, and nephropathy onset or progression in type 2 diabetic patients with normo- or microalbuminuria. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS We longitudinally studied 600 hypertensive type 2 diabetic patients with albuminuria <200 μg/min and who were retrieved from two randomized trials testing the renal effect of trandolapril and delapril. Target blood pressure (BP) was <120/80 mmHg, and HbA1c was <7%. GFR, albuminuria, and glucose disposal rate (GDR) were centrally measured by iohexol plasma clearance, nephelometry in three consecutive overnight urine collections, and hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp, respectively. RESULTS Over a median (range) follow-up of 4.0 (1.7–8.1) years, GFR declined by 3.37 (5.71–1.31) mL/min/1.73 m2 per year. GFR change was bimodal over time: a larger reduction at 6 months significantly predicted slower subsequent decline (coefficient: −0.0054; SE: 0.0009), particularly among hyperfiltering patients. A total of 90 subjects (15%) were hyperfiltering at inclusion, and 11 of 47 (23.4%) patients with persistent hyperfiltration progressed to micro- or macroalbuminuria versus 53 (10.6%) of the 502 who had their hyperfiltration ameliorated at 6 months or were nonhyperfiltering since inclusion (hazard ratio 2.16 [95% CI 1.13–4.14]). Amelioration of hyperfiltration was independent of baseline characteristics or ACE inhibition. It was significantly associated with improved BP and metabolic control, amelioration of GDR, and slower long-term GFR decline on follow-up. CONCLUSIONS Despite intensified treatment, patients with type 2 diabetes have a fast GFR decline. Hyperfiltration affects a subgroup of patients and may contribute to renal function loss and nephropathy onset or progression. Whether amelioration of hyperfiltration is renoprotective is worth investigating.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2012

Rituximab in Idiopathic Membranous Nephropathy

Piero Ruggenenti; Paolo Cravedi; Antonietta Chianca; Annalisa Perna; Barbara Ruggiero; Flavio Gaspari; Alessandro Rambaldi; Maddalena Marasà; Giuseppe Remuzzi

Selective depletion of B cells with the mAb rituximab may benefit the autoimmune glomerular disease idiopathic membranous nephropathy (IMN). Here, we describe our experience treating 100 consecutive IMN patients with persistent nephrotic syndrome with rituximab. We defined complete remission as persistent proteinuria <0.3 g/24 h and partial remission as persistent proteinuria <3 g/24 h, each also having >50% reduction in proteinuria from baseline. During a median follow-up of 29 months after rituximab administration, 65 patients achieved complete or partial remission. The median time to remission was 7.1 months. All 24 patients who had at least 4 years of follow-up achieved complete or partial remission. Rates of remission were similar between patients with or without previous immunosuppressive treatment. Four patients died and four progressed to ESRD. Measured GFR increased by a mean 13.2 (SD 19.6) ml/min per 1.73 m(2) among those who achieved complete remission. Serum albumin significantly increased and albumin fractional clearance decreased among those achieving complete or partial remission. Proteinuria at baseline and the follow-up duration each independently predicted the decline of proteinuria. Furthermore, the magnitude of proteinuria reduction significantly correlated with slower GFR decline (P=0.0001). No treatment-related serious adverse events occurred. In summary, rituximab achieved disease remission and stabilized or improved renal function in a large cohort of high-risk patients with IMN.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2010

Sirolimus Therapy to Halt the Progression of ADPKD

Norberto Perico; Luca Antiga; Anna Caroli; Piero Ruggenenti; Giorgio Fasolini; Mariateresa Cafaro; Patrizia Ondei; Nadia Rubis; Olimpia Diadei; Giulia Gherardi; Silvia Prandini; Andrea Panozo; Rodolfo Flores Bravo; Sergio Carminati; Felipe Rodriguez De Leon; Flavio Gaspari; Monica Cortinovis; Nicola Motterlini; Bogdan Ene-Iordache; Andrea Remuzzi; Giuseppe Remuzzi

Activation of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathways may contribute to uncontrolled cell proliferation and secondary cyst growth in patients with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD). To assess the effects of mTOR inhibition on disease progression, we performed a randomized, crossover study (The SIRENA Study) comparing a 6-month treatment with sirolimus or conventional therapy alone on the growth of kidney volume and its compartments in 21 patients with ADPKD and GFR>or=40 ml/min per 1.73 m2. In 10 of the 15 patients who completed the study, aphthous stomatitis complicated sirolimus treatment but was effectively controlled by topical therapy. Compared with pretreatment, posttreatment mean total kidney volume increased less on sirolimus (46+/-81 ml; P=0.047) than on conventional therapy (70+/-72 ml; P=0.002), but we did not detect a difference between the two treatments (P=0.45). Cyst volume was stable on sirolimus and increased by 55+/-75 ml (P=0.013) on conventional therapy, whereas parenchymal volume increased by 26+/-30 ml (P=0.005) on sirolimus and was stable on conventional therapy. Percentage changes in cyst and parenchyma volumes were significantly different between the two treatment periods. Sirolimus had no appreciable effects on intermediate volume and GFR. Albuminuria and proteinuria marginally but significantly increased during sirolimus treatment. In summary, sirolimus halted cyst growth and increased parenchymal volume in patients with ADPKD. Whether these effects translate into improved long-term outcomes requires further investigation.


Current Opinion in Nephrology and Hypertension | 1998

Application of newer clearance techniques for the determination of glomerular filtration rate.

Flavio Gaspari; Norberto Perico; Giuseppe Remuzzi

Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) is the standard measure of renal function and is critical for the management of renal diseases. Rigorous assessment of GFR requires the measurement of renal clearance of a filtration marker, such as inulin. This method, however, is not suitable for routine clinical practice. Labelled compounds as alternative filtration markers provide accurate and precise GFR measurement, but their use may be limited for safety reasons. Thus investigators have proposed clearance procedures using minute doses of non-radioactive contrast agents, including iothalamate and iohexol. Their renal clearance provides similar accuracy as inulin clearance in GFR estimation, but the need of urine collection again poses certain limitations to the procedure. Thus, plasma clearance of suitable exogenous markers, such X-ray contrast media, has been suggested for measuring renal function, in which the elimination rate of the tracer after a single intravenous injection is evaluated. Plasma clearance of these markers estimated by multiple blood samples provides precise information, but repeated sampling makes this method cumbersome. Abbreviated kinetic profiles have been proposed to predict GFR from the plasma disappearance curve. The simplified method that uses a one-compartment model corrected by the Bröchner-Mortensen formula gives an excellent correlation with inulin clearance and is currently employed for measuring GFR in multi-centre clinical trials.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2015

Anti-Phospholipase A2 Receptor Antibody Titer Predicts Post-Rituximab Outcome of Membranous Nephropathy

Piero Ruggenenti; Hanna Debiec; Barbara Ruggiero; Antonietta Chianca; Timotheé Pellé; Flavio Gaspari; Flavio Suardi; Elena Gagliardini; Silvia Orisio; Ariela Benigni; Pierre Ronco; Giuseppe Remuzzi

Rituximab induces nephrotic syndrome (NS) remission in two-thirds of patients with primary membranous nephropathy (MN), even after other treatments have failed. To assess the relationships among treatment effect, circulating nephritogenic anti-phospholipase A2 receptor (anti-PLA2R) autoantibodies and genetic polymorphisms predisposing to antibody production we serially monitored 24-hour proteinuria and antibody titer in patients with primary MN and long-lasting NS consenting to rituximab (375 mg/m(2)) therapy and genetic analyses. Over a median (range) follow-up of 30.8 (6.0-145.4) months, 84 of 132 rituximab-treated patients achieved complete or partial NS remission (primary end point), and 25 relapsed after remission. Outcomes of patients with or without detectable anti-PLA2R antibodies at baseline were similar. Among the 81 patients with antibodies, lower anti-PLA2R antibody titer at baseline (P=0.001) and full antibody depletion 6 months post-rituximab (hazard ratio [HR], 7.90; 95% confidence interval [95% CI], 2.54 to 24.60; P<0.001) strongly predicted remission. All 25 complete remissions were preceded by complete anti-PLA2R antibody depletion. On average, 50% anti-PLA2R titer reduction preceded equivalent proteinuria reduction by 10 months. Re-emergence of circulating antibodies predicted disease relapse (HR, 6.54; 95% CI, 1.57 to 27.40; P=0.01), whereas initial complete remission protected from the event (HR, 6.63; 95% CI, 2.37 to 18.53; P<0.001). Eighteen patients achieved persistent antibody depletion and complete remission and never relapsed. Outcome was independent of PLA2R1 and HLA-DQA1 polymorphisms and of previous immunosuppressive treatment. Therefore, assessing circulating anti-PLA2R autoantibodies and proteinuria may help in monitoring disease activity and guiding personalized rituximab therapy in nephrotic patients with primary MN.

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Giuseppe Remuzzi

Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research

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Piero Ruggenenti

Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research

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Annalisa Perna

Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research

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Fabiola Carrara

Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research

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Ariela Benigni

Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research

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Nadia Stucchi

Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research

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Antonio Bossi

Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research

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