作者
Judith E Heida,Ron T. Gansevoort,Vicente E. Torres,Olivier Devuyst,Ronald D. Perrone,Jennifer Lee,Hui Li,John Ouyang,Arlene B. Chapman
摘要
Significance Statement Patients with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease are treated with tolvaptan, a V2 receptor antagonist, to slow progression toward ESKD. In theory, tolvaptan could have both BP-increasing and BP-decreasing effects. To investigate the magnitude and time course of the effect of tolvaptan use on BP, the authors conducted a post hoc analysis of data from the TEMPO 3:4 trial, which randomized 1445 patients with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease to tolvaptan or placebo. Their analysis shows that directly after start of tolvaptan therapy, BP does not change, but in the long term, BP gradually becomes lower in patients with tolvaptan compared with placebo. This observation might be attributed to the beneficial effect of tolvaptan on disease progression, a sustained natriuretic effect, or both. Background The V2 receptor antagonist tolvaptan is prescribed to patients with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease to slow disease progression. Tolvaptan may alter BP via various acute and chronic effects. Methods To investigate the magnitude and time course of the effect of tolvaptan use on BP, we conducted a post hoc study of the TEMPO 3:4 trial, which included 1445 patients with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease randomized 2:1 to tolvaptan or placebo for 3 years. We evaluated systolic and diastolic BP, mean arterial pressure, hypertension status, and use and dosing of antihypertensive drugs over the course of the trial. Results At baseline, BP did not differ between study arms. After 3 weeks of tolvaptan use, mean body weight had decreased from 79.7 to 78.8 kg, and mean plasma sodium increased from 140.4 to 142.6 mmol/L (both P <0.001), suggesting a decrease in circulating volume. We observed none of these changes in the placebo arm. Nonetheless, BP remained similar in the study arms. After 3 years of treatment, however, mean systolic BP was significantly lower in participants receiving tolvaptan versus placebo (126 versus 129 mm Hg, respectively; P =0.002), as was mean diastolic BP (81.2 versus 82.6 mm Hg, respectively; P =0.01). These differences leveled off at follow-up 3 weeks after discontinuation of the study medication. Use of antihypertensive drugs remained similar in both study arms during the entire study. Conclusions Long-term treatment with tolvaptan gradually lowered BP compared with placebo, which may be attributed to a beneficial effect on disease progression, a continued natriuretic effect, or both. Clinical Trial registry name and registration number: TEMPO 3:4, NCT00428948