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Diabetic Nephropathy. Dr Peter Andrews Consultant Nephrologist St Helier Hospital, Carshalton, Surrey Frimley Park Hospital, Surrey Farnham HD Unit. Topics to be Covered. Demographics of diabetic renal disease Screening and diagnosis How can diabetic nephropathy be reduced? BP control
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Diabetic Nephropathy Dr Peter Andrews Consultant Nephrologist St Helier Hospital, Carshalton, Surrey Frimley Park Hospital, Surrey Farnham HD Unit
Topics to be Covered • Demographics of diabetic renal disease • Screening and diagnosis • How can diabetic nephropathy be reduced? • BP control • Glycaemic control • BP targets • Choice of antihypertensive agents • The life of a diabetic nephropath and other aspects of management
Treated ESRD Incidence for Selected Countries 1984-95 New Patients/Million Population USA (All) JPN USA (White) CAN AUS FRA UK POL Year of ESRD Incidence
Incidence ESRF by Age: USA 1986-95 Median 64 60 Mean
Treated ESRD Incidence and Prevalence Rates by Race, 1993-95 Rate per Million Pop./Year Overall Rate=242 Overall Rate=909 Race
Causes of Renal Failure Diabetes * 23% Renovascular disease * 21% Chronic interstitial disease 10% Glomerulonephritis 10% Obstructive uropathy * 8% Cystic disease 3% Miscellaneous (amyloid, myeloma) 5% Unknown 20%
Diabetes: the Growing Problem • The prevalence of diabetes is 2-3% and on the increase • >50% type II diabetics are hypertensive • 20% of type II diabetics have renal involvement after 20 years • Approximately equal numbers Type I and Type II diabetics currently entering ESRF
Topics to be Covered • Demographics of diabetic renal disease • Screening and diagnosis • How can diabetic nephropathy be reduced? • BP control • Glycaemic control • BP targets • Choice of antihypertensive agents • The life of a diabetic nephropath and other aspects of management
Screening and Diagnosis • Screening(N Thomas) vs • Opportunistic testing vs • High risk testing vs • Event testing • Serum creatinine • Esp when used with Cr Cl calculators / eGFR • 24 hour urine specimen • Urinary dipstick for protein +/- blood • Assessment for microalbuminuria
Type II Diabetic Nephropathy: a progressive disease Clinical type 2 diabetes Functional changes* Structural changes† Rising blood pressure Microalbuminuria Proteinura Rising serum creatinine levels End-stage renal disease Cardiovascular death Onset of diabetes 2 5 10 20 30 Years *Kidney size , short-term GFR , long-term GFR . †GBM thickening , mesangial expansion ,hypertensive changes +/-.
Importance of Microalbuminuria • Technique Albustix Early morning specimen Infection excluded Repeated tests • AER 20-200 mmol/min • Albumin/creatinine ratio >2 mg/mmol • How useful? Pro’s & cons • Should it prompt referral? No!
Importance of Microalbuminuria/Proteinuria • Predicts CV mortality in DM and non-DM • Predicts renal disease in DM and non-DM PREVEND - increase in cardiovascular mortality of x1.35 for each doubling of urinary albumin excretion • Predicts morbidity • Predicts end-organ damage in all important systems • If you have one bedside test, dip the urine! • Stratifies risk (not an indication for referral)
Serum Creatinine • If it’s raised, its important! • If it’s normal, it may still be abnormal! • Very low threshold for referral / investigation • If only mildly elevated, still a significant predictor of vasculopathy
Measuring Renal Impairment - 1 • GFR is ideal measure of renal function. • Plasma creatinine is used as surrogate for GFR • Large changes in GFR correspond to small changes in creatinine until around 40% of GFR is lost In the elderly, women and malnourished >50% of the GFR will be lost before the creatinine rises above the normal hospital range
Measuring Renal Impairment - 2 Alternative is to measure creatinine clearance which gives a more accurate measurement in mild renal impairment, BUT • 24 hr urine collections unreliable • Awkward to organise, especially as outpatient, therefore often not done
Measuring Renal Impairment - 3 A better alternative is to use a formula to predict GFR from plasma creatinine measurement eg Cockcroft-Gault: Cr Cl ml/min = 1.23 x (140-age) x weight in kg plasma creatinine umol/l • takes body weight into account • takes into account that urinary creatinine excretion decreases with age regardless of renal function • makes allowances for smaller creatinine production in women by replacing 1.23 with 1.04
Minor Renal Dysfunction Predicts Risk of Cardiovascular Disease • HOORN Study: • Population based cohort, n=631 • Age 50-75 yrs • Followed 10.2 yrs • 5ml/min drop in GFR increased risk of CV death by 26%
Minor Renal Dysfunction Predicts Risk of Cardiovascular Disease P<0.001 P<0.001 22.1% 15.1% 11.4% 6.6% HOPE study : Patients at high risk of cardiovascular events. Mann JF Ann Intern Med 2001 134:629-36
NEJM Sept 23rd 2004 • Anavekar et al: VALIANT sub-study • 14500 pts followed 2.14 years • Below 81ml/min, each 10ml/min decrease = 1.1 x risk ratio for death & CV outcomes • The lower the GFR, the lower the use of aspirin, beta blockade, statin, & revascularisation • Go et al: 1.12 million adults followed for 2.84 years (Kaiser) • RR CV death below 60 ml/min x 1.2 • RR 30 - 44 ml/min x 1.8 • RR 15 - 29 ml/min x 3.2 • RR <15 ml/min x 5.9
Diagnosis of Diabetic Nephropathy • Usually clinical • Rarely, renal biopsy Indications: Atypical clinical course Absence of retinopathy High grade proteinuria Reasons: Exclude other pathology Aid management Inform prognosis
Topics to be Covered • Demographics of diabetic renal disease • Screening and diagnosis • How can diabetic nephropathy be reduced? • BP targets • Choice of antihypertensive agents • The life of a diabetic nephropath and other aspects of management
How can Diabetic Nephropathy be Reduced? • DM Control NB NICE target 6.5 – 7.5% • BP Control
Optimisation of Diabetes • Long established importance in Type I DM (DCCT 1993) • Effectiveness in Type II DM - UKPDS (1998) “The UKPDS has shown that intensive blood glucose control reduces the risk of diabetic complications, the greatest effect being on microvascular complications”
Glucose Control Study Summary • The intensive glucose control policy maintained a lower HbA1c by mean 0.9 % over a median follow up of 10 years from diagnosis of type 2 diabetes with reduction in risk of: • 12% for any diabetes related endpoint p=0.029 • 25% for microvascular endpoints p=0.0099 • 16% for myocardial infarction p=0.052 • 24% for cataract extraction p=0.046 • 21% for retinopathy at twelve years p=0.015 • 33% for albuminuria at twelve years p=0.000054
risk reduction37% p=0.0092 Effect of BP on Microvascular endpoints - incl ESRFTight control (< 150/85) or less tight control (< 180/105)
250 225 200 175 150 125 100 75 50 25 0 Type II Diabetes and Hypertension: Non-diabetic Diabetic Cardiovascular mortality rate/10,000 person-yr < 120 120–139 140–159 160–179 180–199 ³ 200 Systolic blood pressure (mm Hg) Stamler J et al. Diabetes Care. 1993;16:434-444.
HOT Study: 51% RR Reduction of CV Events in DM 25 20 Major cardiovascular events/1,000 patient-years 15 p=0.005 for trend 10 5 0 90 85 80 mm Hg Target Diastolic Blood Pressure Hansson L et al. Lancet. 1998;351:1755-1762.
Lower Blood Pressure is Associated with Slower Decline in GFR Mean arterial pressure (mm Hg) 98 100 102 104 106 108 110 0 r = 0.66; p<0.05 -2 GFR decline(mL/min/year) -4 -6 -8 -10 Results of studies ³ 3 years in patients with type 2 diabetic nephropathy. Bakris GL. Diabetes Res Clin Pract. 1998;39(suppl):S35-42.
Topics to be Covered • Demographics of diabetic renal disease • Screening and diagnosis • How can diabetic nephropathy be reduced? • BP targets • Choice of antihypertensive agents • The life of a diabetic nephropath and other aspects of management
BHS Guidelines 2004: Optimal Targets for Treatment • Most patients • <140 systolic and • <85 diastolic • If high risk(DM, renal disease, organ damage) • <130 systolic and • <80 diastolic • If daytime ABPM or home readings, subtract 10/5 • N.B. Audit target (=minimal standard) is <150/90, or <140/80 if high risk
BP Targets • BHS V DM 130/80 140/85 • BHS Audit DM 140/80 150/90 • NICE DM 135/75 140/90 • SIGN DM 135/75 (if nephropathy) • GMS DM 145/85 150/90
HOWEVER • Targets attained not = desired • USA - 27% achieve target • Canada - 16% achieve target • UK – 16% achieve target • Reluctance to escalate therapy • cost • therapeutic drift • therapeutic nihilism • Over-use of monotherapy
Topics to be Covered • Demographics of diabetic renal disease • Screening and diagnosis • How can diabetic nephropathy be reduced? • BP targets • Choice of antihypertensive agents • The life of a diabetic nephropath and other aspects of management
0.40 0.20 0.00 -0.20 -0.40 -0.60 Are all agents equal in terms of renoprotection? Proteinuria Albuminuria Log change from baseline † * ACE inhibitors Calcium channel blockers Beta-blockers Control Meta-regression analysis of 100 studies totaling 2494 patients with type 1 and type 2 diabetes. *p<0.05 vs calcium channel blockers. †p<0.05 vs control. Kasiske BL et al. Ann Intern Med. 1993;118:129-138.
Use of ACE Inhibitors / ARB in CRF • In diabetics, ACE inhibitors / ARB reduce the progression of microalbuminuria to overt proteinuria, and also slow the decline in GFR • IRMA, RENAL studies • numbers reaching end stage reduced 23% • doubling of serum creatinine reduced by up to 35% in dose-dependent fashion
Why do ACE / ARB Inhibitors Protect ? • ACE inhibitors / ARBs lower intraglomerular pressure and are more effective at doing this than most other anti-hypertensive agents • Degree of proteinuria varies directly with intraglomerular pressure - ACE inhibitors lower proteinuria by 35%-40%
GLOMERULUS Angiotensin Angiotensin afferent arteriole efferent arteriole JGA Capillary loops and mesangial cells Proximal tubule
Suggested Protocol • Type I diabetic with any sign of nephropathy should be on an ACE inhibitor/ARB regardless of BP • Type II diabetic with microalbuminuria should be on ACE inhibitor/ARB as first line treatment for BP if > 120/70 • Type II diabetic with overt nephropathy should be on ACE inhibitor/ARB • Anyone with CRF, high BP should be treated with ACE/ARB as first line treatment (goal of 130/80 or lower) • Anyone with CRF and protein > 1g ? ACE/ARB whatever BP
ACEI and Decline in Renal Function • Drop in intraglomerular pressure may drop GFR • Rise of 10-20% in serum creatinine is common and should not result in ACE being stopped unless the rise continues • One review found that an initial rise in creatinine correlated with slower rate of long-term renal dysfunction
ACE combined with AII antagonists • Until recently, little published experience; no large, long-term outcome trials • 5-7 mmHg reduction in BP with dual therapy • Great care over potassium
ACE combined with AII antagonists • CALM study (BMJ 2000;321:1440) • ACE vs AIIRA vs combination • 199 pts, crossover, blinded study, 24 wk study • BP reduction > in combination group than monotherapy(16.3 vs 10.4/10.7 mmHg) • Greater reduction in proteinuria (50% vs 24/39%)
ACE combined with AII antagonists • CHARM Lancet Sept 2003 • Additional cardio-protection • Both diabetic and non-diabetic populations • Increased incidence cough (15-20%) Care re K+ ? Spironolactone better alternative • ? Cost-effective to prescribe
Topics to be Covered • Demographics of diabetic renal disease • Screening and diagnosis • How can diabetic nephropathy be reduced? • BP control • Glycaemic control • BP targets • Choice of antihypertensive agents • The life of a diabetic nephropath and other aspects of management
The Life of a Diabetic Nephropath • 0-10 years Well Hyperfiltration • 10-14 years Microalbuminuria • 14-20 years Proteinuria Pathlogy Deteriorating GFR • ESRF
The Life of a Diabetic Nephropath • ESRF Options • PD 5 years • HD 10 years • Cadaveric renal transplant 8-10 years • Living donor renal transplant 12-18 years • Isolated pancreas transplant ? • SKP transplant ?