Abstract
Background
Renin–angiotensin–aldosterone system (RAAS) blockade with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEi) or angiotensin receptor blockers (ARB) is the cornerstone of antihypertensive treatment in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) and diabetes mellitus. Mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists (MRA) on top of conventional RAAS blockade confer cardio- and renoprotective effects. Yet, the detailed effects of this therapeutic approach on key RAAS effectors have not been elucidated to date.
Methods
In this exploratory placebo-controlled study, 15 patients with CKD stages 2–3 and albuminuria due to diabetic kidney disease (DKD) were randomized to receive the MRA eplerenone or placebo in addition to ACEi therapy. Employing mass-spectrometry, we quantified plasma angiotensin levels [Ang I, Ang II, Ang-(1–7), Ang-(1–5), Ang III, Ang IV], renin and aldosterone in patients before and after 8 weeks of MRA treatment.
Results
While blood pressure and kidney function were similar in the placebo and eplerenone treatment group during the study period, distinct differences in RAAS regulation occurred: eplerenone treatment resulted in an increase in plasma renin activity, Ang I and aldosterone concentrations, indicating global RAAS activation. In addition, eplerenone on top of ACEi profoundly upregulated the alternative RAAS effector Ang-(1–7).
Conclusions
Combined eplerenone and ACEi therapy increases Ang-(1–7) levels in patients with CKD indicating a unique nephroprotective RAAS pattern with considerable therapeutic implications.
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Avoid common mistakes on your manuscript.
There is an alarming rise of the prevalence of patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) and diabetes mellitus globally, which is associated with excessive morbidity and mortality. |
RAAS blockade with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEi) or angiotensin receptor blockers (ARB) can dampen but not halt the progression of CKD. |
We hypothesize that mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists (MRA) on top of conventional RAAS blockade change the angiotensin pattern resulting in cardio- and renoprotective effects. |
Eplerenone on top of ACEi upregulates plasma renin, Ang I and aldosterone concentrations, while Ang II remains suppressed. |
Eplerenone add on to ACEi further increases plasma Ang-(1–7) levels. |
Potential beneficial effects of alternative RAAS activation should be considered for personalised renoprotective therapies in patients with CKD and diabetes mellitus. |
Introduction
The renin–angiotensin–aldosterone system (RAAS) is a complex regulatory network of peptides with widespread effects on blood pressure regulation, salt balance and fluid homeostasis [1,2,3]. RAAS blockade with ACE inhibitors (ACEi) or angiotensin receptor blockers (ARB) has been the cornerstone of antihypertensive therapy aimed at delaying progression of chronic kidney disease (CKD) and reducing proteinuria in both diabetic and non-diabetic patients with CKD [4,5,6,7]. It has been suggested that in patients with CKD and advanced diabetic kidney disease (DKD), ACEi might be superior to ARB in lowering risk of all-cause mortality [8, 9]. During the past decade, numerous animal and human studies have shown the beneficial effects of the selective mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist (MRA) eplerenone on renal outcome parameters like proteinuria [10, 11]. Moreover, eplerenone treatment had anti-inflammatory, antifibrotic and antioxidative effects improving glomerular, arteriolar and tubulointerstitial lesions in rodent models, despite having no effect on haemodynamics, thereby securing nephroprotection [12, 13]. Patients with CKD and diabetes mellitus have an enhanced susceptibility to adverse cardiovascular outcomes; hence these patients theoretically stand to benefit the most from add-on MRA therapy. The combination of eplerenone with ACEi has been shown to be beneficial in patients with chronic heart failure [14]. Furthermore, this combination therapy has been demonstrated to slow DKD progression in a rodent model [15] and to have additional anti-proteinuric effects in patients with CKD and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) [10, 14, 16, 17]. Besides functional consequences, addition of MRA to ACEi might fundamentally affect the RAAS at the molecular level. Although often combined with RAAS blockers, the detailed effects of this therapeutic approach on RAAS metabolism have not been elucidated.
Accumulating evidence indicates that Ang-(1–7), the key alternative RAAS effector peptide may confer beneficial vasodilatory, anti-inflammatory and antifibrotic effects opposing the actions of the ‘classical RAAS’ with its main effector Ang II [18,19,20,21,22,23]. Therefore, in this study we have investigated the effects of eplerenone on top of ACEi therapy compared to placebo on systemic RAAS metabolism with its key effector molecules.
Using a mass spectrometry-based approach [24], we have analysed quantitative differences between key Ang profiles of patients with CKD and diabetes mellitus receiving eplerenone on top of ACEi compared to placebo-treated patients in a prospective randomized trial.
Methods
Patient Recruitment
This 10-week prospective, randomized, controlled exploratory trial included 15 patients with diabetes mellitus and proteinuric CKD. Patients had a mean HbA1c of 6.9 ± 1.6% and a diagnosis of diabetes mellitus for a median 14.5 (IQR [7–23]) years. Nine of 15 patients had insulin dependence.
Patients were eligible for inclusion if they were diagnosed with albuminuric CKD stage 2–3 (defined by an estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) (CKD-EPI) of 30–90 ml/min/1.73 m2) and diagnosed T2DM (defined by World Health Organization (WHO) criteria). Proteinuria was defined by urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio (UACR) > 300 mg/g on a spot urine sample or > 200 mg/g if they already received RAAS blockade with an ACEi or ARB [25]. Additionally, patients had to be neither hypo- nor severely hypertensive at the time of inclusion (systolic blood pressure > 120 mmHg and < 180 mmHg on ambulatory measurement). According to the Seventh Report of the Joint National Committee on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure (JNC7) classification, all patients classified as having high normal blood pressure or stage 1 or 2 hypertension [26].
Exclusion criteria were as follows: age < 18 years, > 80 years, UACR > 3500 mg/g, severe hypertension, pregnancy (or planned pregnancy), coronary heart disease, severe renal insufficiency (eGFR < 30ml/min/1,73m2) systolic blood pressure < 120 mmHg, additional RAAS interfering drugs (ACEi, ARB, direct renin inhibitors), 25-hydroxy vitamin D levels below 16.6 ± 8.3 pg/ml, 1,25-dihydroxy vitamin D 33.1 ± 15.5 pg/ml, severe liver insufficiency (Child-Pugh class C), potassium sparing diuretics, strong CYP3A4-inhibitors, serum potassium level > 5mmol/L at study inclusion, intolerance to eplerenone or an excipient of it.
All patients were recruited from the outpatient clinic of the Clinical Division of Nephrology and Dialysis of the Medical University of Vienna, Austria between 2013 and 2017. We had a total dropout of four patients (two because of non-compliant study medication intake, two because of suspected unexpected serious adverse reaction (hospitalisation during study period).
Study Procedures
This study was approved by the Ethics Committee of the Medical University of Vienna (EK 1329/2012). It was registered at the European Clinical Trials Database (EUDRACT No. 2012-002175-34) and at a publicly available clinical trial database [https://clinicaltrials.gov (NCT01832558)]. The study was carried out according to good clinical and scientific practice guidelines and in accordance with the Helsinki Declaration of 1964, and its later amendments. All participants provided their written informed consent prior to participation.
All study participants underwent a 2-week run-in phase to unify their ACEi therapy to enalapril (20 mg daily). Blood collection was then performed for baseline RAAS analysis, measurement of renin and aldosterone as well as a urine analysis for albuminuria. If severely hypertensive blood pressure values were elicited through this measure, additional antihypertensive treatment, preferably with calcium channel blockers or beta-blockers were introduced.
Subsequently, patients were randomized to either receive eplerenone 25 mg (Fig. 1 and Supplementary Fig. 1) or placebo on top of ACEi for 8 weeks. Patients were instructed to take the study medication 2 h before blood collection. A routine laboratory control of electrolytes and creatinine was performed after the first week of the study phase. At the end of the active study phase, analysis of RAAS components as well as routine blood analysis was performed again. After the end of the study phase (after 8 weeks), patients continued to be treated at the outpatient clinic of the Clinical Division of Nephrology according to good clinical practice guidelines. Continuation or discontinuation of eplerenone treatment after the end of the study was the choice of the medical team of the outpatient clinic.
Blood Collection and Processing
For the quantification of angiotensin metabolites and aldosterone, a blood collection via cubital vein was performed. Six millilitres of heparinized peripheral blood was collected. Plasma was obtained by centrifugation (4 °C) at 2000×g for 10 min and 2-ml aliquots were stored at − 80 °C until analysis. Equilibrium concentrations of the peptides Ang I, Ang II, Ang III, Ang IV, Ang-(1–7) and Ang-(1–5), as well as the level of the steroid aldosterone, were measured in human plasma by LC–MS/MS (Attoquant Diagnostics, Vienna). Briefly, samples were spiked with stable isotope-labelled (peptides) or deuterated (aldosterone) internal standards after equilibration [27] and analytes were extracted using C18-based solid-phase extraction. Extracted samples were analysed using mass spectrometry analysis using a reversed-phase analytical column (Acquity UPLC C18, Waters) operating in line with a XEVO TQ-S triple quadrupole mass spectrometer (Waters Xevo TQ/S, Milford, MA) in multiple reaction monitoring mode. Internal standards were used to correct for analyte recovery across the sample preparation procedure in each individual sample. Analyte concentrations were calculated from integrated chromatograms considering the corresponding response factors determined in appropriate calibration curves in plasma matrix, when integrated signals exceeded a signal-to-noise ratio of 10. The lower limits of quantification were 3 pmol/l; (Ang I), 2 pmol/l (Ang II), 2.5 pmol/l (Ang III), 2 pmol/l (Ang IV), 3 pmol/l (Ang-(1–7)), 2 pmol/l (Ang-(1–5)) and 20 pmol/l (aldosterone), respectively.
Angiotensin-based markers for renin (PRA-S) and angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE-S) were derived from Ang II and Ang I levels by calculating their sum and their ratio, respectively [28, 29]. Additionally, direct renin concentration was measured with a clinical chemiluminescence immunoassay (Diasorin, Saluggia, Italy).
Statistical Analysis
Demographic data are presented as mean values with standard deviation (SD) if normally distributed (verified by Shapiro–Wilk’s test) and unpaired Student’s t test was performed to determine differences between treatment and placebo groups. Non-parametric data are shown as medians [interquartile range] and Mann–Whitney’s U test was applied to determine differences between treatment and placebo groups.
Angiotensin values below the lower limit of quantification (LLOQ) were substituted by LLOQ/Sqrt(2) [30, 31]. In Fig. 4, calculated median values, which were below the LLOQ, were specified as such. For the analysis of angiotensins before and after medical intervention, Wilcoxon’s signed-rank test was used. A p value of 0.05 or less was considered statistically significant. IBM SPSS System version 20.0.0 (SPSS, Inc., 2010, Chicago, IL) and GraphPad Prism Version 6 were used for all analyses (San Diego, CA).
Results
Baseline Clinical Characteristics
Both study groups were comparable in demographic and baseline laboratory characteristics at the time of study inclusion (Table 1 and Supplementary Table 1). Of note, serum creatinine levels of the eplerenone group were significantly higher at inclusion; however, no differences in eGFR were observed. Three patients in the placebo group received additional antihypertensive therapy (beta-blocker and/or calcium antagonist) and one patient in the treatment group received a beta-blocker in addition to ACEi therapy. Therapy adherence of all study patients was assessed after the 2-week run-in phase and at the end of the active study phase by mass spectrometry-based measurements of enalaprilat levels (data not shown). All patients had previously received dietary counselling addressing the requirements of CKD stages 2–3.
Eplerenone on top of ACEi Upregulates Ang I, Ang-(1–7) and Aldosterone
While we found Ang II to be similarly suppressed in the eplerenone (median 3.0 [IQR 2.7–37.5 pmol/l]) and placebo group (2.6 [1.4–11.8 pmol/l]), we observed a significant Ang I upregulation after eplerenone treatment (median 487.6 [48.3–2894.2 pmol/l]) (Fig. 2) compared to placebo (median 119.3 [39.7–359.1 pmol/l], (p < 0.05)). The key effector of the alternative RAAS axis Ang-(1–7) was also significantly upregulated after eplerenone treatment (median 22.2 [2.1–166.1 pmol/l]) versus placebo (median 6.3 [2.1–14.8 pmol/l], (p < 0.05)), while downstream RAAS effectors such as Ang-(1–5), Ang III and Ang IV remained close to or below the lower limit of quantitation (LLOQ, < 2.0 pmol/l) in both study groups (Fig. 3 and Table 2). Individual angiotensin levels before and after placebo or eplerenone treatment are shown in Supplementary Fig. 3.
Eplerenone on top of ACEi Upregulates Renin While ACE Activity Remains Suppressed
Both renin and aldosterone concentrations were prominently affected by eplerenone treatment, with eplerenone treatment inducing a seven-fold increase in PRA-S (angiotensin-based marker for renin (calculated by sum of Ang I + Ang II) [28] (median 73.5 [IQR 33.4–799.0 pmol/l] before treatment vs. 495.5 [49.3–2932 pmol/l] after treatment; p < 0.05), while PRA-S remained stable in the placebo group during the treatment period (222.5 [92.6–1701 pmol/l] before treatment vs. 176.2 [40.7–363.1 pmol/l] after treatment; p = 0.161) (Fig. 4). Direct renin concentrations showed only a moderate correlation with plasma renin activity (Supplementary Fig. 2). However, the observed increase in plasma renin in the eplerenone group remained significant. Similarly, plasma aldosterone concentration was upregulated following eplerenone treatment (median 90.2 [IQR 78.0–122.7 pmol/l] before treatment vs. 222.2 [206.1–329.9 pmol/l] after treatment; p < 0.05), while aldosterone concentrations remained stable in the placebo group (median 142.0 [47.9–245.0 pmol/l] before treatment vs. 66.5 [21.0–376.7 pmol/l] after treatment; p = 0.87). Individual aldosterone, PRA-S and ACE-S levels before and after placebo or eplerenone treatment are shown in Supplementary Fig. 4. In both patient groups, plasma ACE activity (ACE-S, calculated by ratio Ang II/Ang I [29]) was not significantly affected by eplerenone treatment (median 0.02 [0.01–0.03] compared to placebo (0.03 [IQR 0.01–0.05]; p = 0.411). To further analyse the main enzymes responsible for Ang-(1–7) synthesis we measured plasma ACE2 levels and calculated the Ang-(1–7)/Ang I ratio representing neprilysin (NEP) activity. We found that neither ACE2 levels nor Ang-(1–7)/Ang I ratios were different between the placebo and eplerenone group (Fig. 5).
Blood Pressure, Kidney Function and Proteinuria
There were no significant differences in arterial blood pressure decrease between the eplerenone and the placebo group (Table 3). We observed no change in eGFR (median 42 [32–57] ml/min/1.73 m2 before treatment vs. 41 [29–52–] ml/min/1.73 m2 after treatment) and proteinuria (urinary protein/creatinine ratio (UPCR)) (median 1388 ± 923 mg/g before treatment vs. 1041 ± 63 mg/g after treatment) within the eplerenone group. Similarly, no change in the placebo group was observed. As measures of patient safety, serum potassium and eGFR were measured regularly. At 1 week of eplerenone treatment, potassium levels increased from 4.5 ± 0.3 mmol/l to 4.8 ± 0.3 mmol/l (p < 0.05), while eGFR remained stable (42 [33–56] ml/min/1.73 m2 vs. 37 [30–43] ml/min/1.73 m2). At the end of the 8-week study phase, plasma potassium increased to 5.1 ± 0.5 mmol/l in the eplerenone group and remained stable in the placebo group 4.5 ± 0.4 mmol/l.
Discussion
The underlying molecular mechanisms of the renoprotective effects of MRA in patients with DKD remain largely unknown. In this placebo-controlled study we have found a distinct molecular response of the RAAS reflected by upregulation of renin, Ang I and high systemic Ang-(1–7) levels while Ang II remained suppressed in DKD patients receiving 8 weeks of treatment with the MRA eplerenone in addition to ACEi, indicative of a superior nephroprotective angiotensin pattern.
The overall effect on blood pressure and kidney function was comparable in both study groups. At the molecular level, eplerenone treatment activated the systemic RAAS reflected by upregulation of renin and Ang I, while Ang II remained suppressed. Interestingly, the key effector molecule of the alternative RAAS, Ang-(1–7), was significantly upregulated by eplerenone possibly contributing to the observed beneficial clinical outcomes following this treatment in these patients [11].
RAAS blockade with ACEi has been the cornerstone for antihypertensive treatment of patients with CKD and diabetes mellitus [4, 5]. While it has been shown in some studies that ACEi were superior to ARB regarding cardiovascular death and all-cause mortality in patients with CKD and DKD [8], there still remains a substantial residual renal risk, favouring add-on therapy such as MRA.
We have previously shown that beneficial effects associated with ACEi use are not solely mediated by the reduction in blood pressure and decrease in glomerular pressure, but also by fundamental changes of RAAS effector peptide profiles [32, 33]. Following RAAS blockade with ACEi an upregulation of renin and Ang I via a negative feedback mechanism has been previously described [27, 32]. Importantly, therapeutic ACE inhibition suppresses pro-inflammatory and pro-fibrotic plasma Ang II levels and upregulates plasma Ang-(1–7), which might confer various renoprotective effects [32, 33].
MRA treatment has beneficial effects in animal models of DKD and has been shown to lower the risk of CKD progression and cardiovascular events [11, 13]. Specifically eplerenone administration reduced proteinuria and glomerular, arteriolar and tubulointerstitial lesions in the kidney, despite having no effect on haemodynamics and fewer clinical side effects compared to spironolactone [13].
Here, we combine ACEi with MRA treatment and could show that eplerenone on top of ACEi further upregulates the nephroprotective RAAS effector Ang-(1–7). Accumulating data indicate that this angiotensin is centred in the alternative neprilysin (NEP)/angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2)/angiotensin (Ang)-(1–7)/Mas receptor (MasR) axis, which has beneficial anti-inflammatory, vasodilatatory and anti-proteinuric effects [21, 23, 34]. Hence, our results provide a strong incentive to further investigate Ang-(1–7) as a therapeutic target in the treatment of diabetes-induced hypertension and renal damage in human studies. While Ang-(1–7) has no direct agonistic activity on aldosterone secretion, this heptapeptide has been reported to act as a negative modulator of aldosterone secretion in vitro and in vivo [35, 36].
As expected, eplerenone treatment neither affected Ang-(1–5), the product of ACE-driven Ang-(1–7) conversion, nor downstream products of Ang II such as Ang III and Ang IV.
It is known that MRA blockade upregulates plasma renin and aldosterone levels in patients with hypertension [37, 38]. Our study therefore implies that treatment with eplerenone on top of ACEi results in additional proximal substrates for the RAAS cascade represented by increased renin activity (PRA-S) and Ang I levels. Furthermore, eplerenone on top of ACEi results in an upregulation of Ang-(1–7) while simultaneously suppressing Ang II.
However, ACE2 levels and the Ang-(1–7)/Ang I ratio (reflecting NEP activity) remained similar in patients receiving eplerenone compared to placebo indicating no relative differences in enzyme activity for Ang-(1–7) formation. Therefore, it is tempting to speculate that the additional upregulation of Ang-(1–7) observed in our study might stem from overall RAAS activation, which is also reflected by elevated renin, PRA-S and Ang I concentrations in the eplerenone treatment group.
Our findings offer a reasonable targeted therapeutic strategy aimed at the alternative RAAS metabolism to enforce high plasma Ang-(1–7) levels and to reduce the residual renal risk in patients with DKD under conventional RAAS inhibitor therapy.
Accumulating data obtained from prospective clinical trials have established that the risk for developing severe hyperkalemia in patients with CKD is significantly less prevalent than previously thought, and that instituting MRA in combination with RAAS blockade in these patients with appropriate laboratory surveillance may be a reasonable treatment option [16, 39]. Furthermore, recent studies demonstrating the efficacy of novel non-absorbed, orally administered, potassium-binding polymers indicate that adequate surveillance, moderate or low-dose MRA, and use of these potassium-binding polymers may help to adequately control serum potassium in patients with CKD even in advanced CKD stages [40]. Therefore, successful RAAS blockade in patients with CKD can be employed when careful consideration to the individual patient characteristics along with consequent and careful monitoring of eGFR and serum-potassium is given.
Our study has some limitations: first, it is of exploratory design and the number of included patients is small. Second, of the 15 included patients, only 3 were women, precluding the potential to make a statement on the influence of gender on RAAS regulation. Third, there is no long-term (i.e. more than 3 months) follow-up data of the studied patients. Forth, no women were in the eplerenone subgroup.
Strengths of the study are its prospective, placebo-controlled nature, examination of human subjects and the simultaneous quantification of several RAAS metabolites by a highly selective and specific assay (internal standardization, UPLC–MS/MS analysis) [24, 41].
Conclusions
This is the first trial studying the molecular changes of both the classical and alternative RAAS under eplerenone treatment on top of ACEi in patients with CKD and T2DM. We demonstrate that eplerenone on top of ACEi further increases renin and Ang I levels and the key alternative RAAS peptide Ang-(1–7). As the alternative RAAS potentially confers nephroprotective effects, these findings might be taken into consideration in the treatment of patients with CKD and T2DM.
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Acknowledgements
We want to thank the team members of the outpatient clinic of the Clinical Division of Nephrology and Dialysis of the Medical University Vienna for careful handling of blood and urine samples. The authors want to thank any study participant for their involvement in the study.
Funding
The journal’s Rapid Service Fee was funded 50% by the authors and 50% by the Medical University of Vienna.
Authorship
All named authors meet the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) criteria for authorship for this article, take responsibility for the integrity of the work as a whole, and have given their approval for this version to be published.
Authorship Contributions
Conceptualization: Marcus D. Säemann; Methodology: Marko Poglitsch, Oliver Domenig; Formal analysis and investigation: Johannes J. Kovarik; Writing—original draft preparation: Johannes J. Kovarik, Marlies Antlanger, Chantal Kopecky; Writing—review and editing: Christopher Kaltenecker; Supervision: Marcus D. Säemann. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
Disclosures
Johannes J. Kovarik, Christopher C. Kaltenecker, Oliver Domenig, Marlies Antlanger, Marko Poglitsch, Chantal Kopecky and Marcus D. Säemann have nothing to disclose.
Compliance with Ethics Guidelines
This study was approved by the Ethics Committee of the Medical University of Vienna (EK 1329/2012). It was registered at the European Clinical Trials Database (EUDRACT No. 2012-002175-34) and at a publicly available clinical trial database (https://clinicaltrials.gov (NCT01832558)). The study was carried out according to good clinical and scientific practice guidelines and in accordance with the Helsinki Declaration of 1964, and its later amendments. All participants provided their written informed consent prior to participation.
Data Availability
The datasets generated and analysed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.
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Kovarik, J.J., Kaltenecker, C.C., Domenig, O. et al. Effect of Mineralocorticoid Receptor Antagonism and ACE Inhibition on Angiotensin Profiles in Diabetic Kidney Disease: An Exploratory Study. Diabetes Ther 12, 2485–2498 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s13300-021-01118-7
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s13300-021-01118-7