TY - JOUR
T1 - Vitamin D receptor activator and dietary sodium restriction to reduce residual urinary albumin excretion in chronic kidney disease (ViRTUE study)
T2 - rationale and study protocol
AU - Keyzer, Charlotte A.
AU - de Jong, Maarten A.
AU - van Breda, G. Fenna
AU - Vervloet, Marc G.
AU - Laverman, Gozewijn D.
AU - Hemmelder, Marc
AU - Janssen, Wilbert M.
AU - Heerspink, Hiddo J. Lambers
AU - Navis, Gerjan
AU - de Borst, Martin H.
AU - Holland Nephrology Study HONEST
PY - 2016/7
Y1 - 2016/7
N2 - Optimal albuminuria reduction is considered essential to halting chronic kidney disease (CKD) progression. Both vitamin D receptor activator (VDRA) treatment and dietary sodium restriction potentiate the efficacy of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone- system (RAAS) blockade to reduce albuminuria. The ViRTUE study addresses whether a VDRA in combination with dietary sodium restriction provides further albuminuria reduction in non-diabetic CKD patients on top of RAAS blockade. The ViRTUE study is an investigator-initiated, prospective, multi-centre, randomized, double-blind (paricalcitol versus placebo), placebo-controlled trial targeting stage 1-3 CKD patients with residual albuminuria of > 300 mg/day due to nondiabetic glomerular disease, despite angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor or angiotensin receptor blocker use. During run-in, all subjects switched to standardized RAAS blockade (ramipril 10 mg/day) and blood pressure titrated to <140/90 mmHg according to a standardized protocol. Eligible patients are subsequently enrolled and undergo four consecutive study periods in random order of 8 weeks each: (i) paricalcitol (2 mu g/day) combined with a liberal sodium diet (similar to 200 mmol Na+/day, i.e. mean sodium intake in the general population), (ii) paricalcitol (2 mu g/day) combined with dietary sodium restriction (target: 50 mmol Na+/day), (iii) placebo combined with a liberal sodium diet and (iv) placebo combined with dietary sodium restriction. Data are collected at the end of each study period. The primary outcome is 24-h urinary albumin excretion. Secondary study outcomes are blood pressure, renal function (estimated glomerular filtration rate), plasma renin activity and, in a sub-population (N = 9), renal haemodynamics (measured glomerular filtration rate and effective renal plasma flow). A sample size of 50 patients provides 90% power to detect a 23% reduction in albuminuria, assuming a 25% dropout rate. Further reduction of residual albuminuria by combination of VDRA treatment and sodium restriction during single-agent RAAS-blockade will justify long-term studies on cardiorenal outcomes and safety.
AB - Optimal albuminuria reduction is considered essential to halting chronic kidney disease (CKD) progression. Both vitamin D receptor activator (VDRA) treatment and dietary sodium restriction potentiate the efficacy of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone- system (RAAS) blockade to reduce albuminuria. The ViRTUE study addresses whether a VDRA in combination with dietary sodium restriction provides further albuminuria reduction in non-diabetic CKD patients on top of RAAS blockade. The ViRTUE study is an investigator-initiated, prospective, multi-centre, randomized, double-blind (paricalcitol versus placebo), placebo-controlled trial targeting stage 1-3 CKD patients with residual albuminuria of > 300 mg/day due to nondiabetic glomerular disease, despite angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor or angiotensin receptor blocker use. During run-in, all subjects switched to standardized RAAS blockade (ramipril 10 mg/day) and blood pressure titrated to <140/90 mmHg according to a standardized protocol. Eligible patients are subsequently enrolled and undergo four consecutive study periods in random order of 8 weeks each: (i) paricalcitol (2 mu g/day) combined with a liberal sodium diet (similar to 200 mmol Na+/day, i.e. mean sodium intake in the general population), (ii) paricalcitol (2 mu g/day) combined with dietary sodium restriction (target: 50 mmol Na+/day), (iii) placebo combined with a liberal sodium diet and (iv) placebo combined with dietary sodium restriction. Data are collected at the end of each study period. The primary outcome is 24-h urinary albumin excretion. Secondary study outcomes are blood pressure, renal function (estimated glomerular filtration rate), plasma renin activity and, in a sub-population (N = 9), renal haemodynamics (measured glomerular filtration rate and effective renal plasma flow). A sample size of 50 patients provides 90% power to detect a 23% reduction in albuminuria, assuming a 25% dropout rate. Further reduction of residual albuminuria by combination of VDRA treatment and sodium restriction during single-agent RAAS-blockade will justify long-term studies on cardiorenal outcomes and safety.
KW - albuminuria
KW - paricalcitol
KW - randomized-controlled trial
KW - sodium reduction
KW - RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL
KW - NONDIABETIC RENAL-DISEASE
KW - DIABETIC-NEPHROPATHY
KW - ACE-INHIBITION
KW - BLOOD-PRESSURE
KW - END-POINTS
KW - PROTEINURIA
KW - PARICALCITOL
KW - PROGRESSION
KW - LOSARTAN
U2 - 10.1093/ndt/gfv033
DO - 10.1093/ndt/gfv033
M3 - Review article
SN - 0931-0509
VL - 31
SP - 1081
EP - 1087
JO - Nephrology, Dialysis, Transplantation
JF - Nephrology, Dialysis, Transplantation
IS - 7
ER -