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Drugs and the Kidney

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Drugs and the Kidney. Drugs and the Kidney. 1 Renal Physiology and Pharmacokinetics ... Cockroft-Gault Formula. CrCl=Fx(140-age)xweight/CreaP. F=1.04. F=1.23. Example ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Drugs and the Kidney


1
Drugs and the Kidney
2
Drugs and the Kidney
  • 1 Renal Physiology and Pharmacokinetics
  • 2 Drugs and the normal kidney
  • 3 Drugs toxic to the kidney
  • 4 Prescribing in kidney disease

3
Normal Kidney Function
  • 1 Extra Cellular Fluid Volume control
  • 2 Electrolyte balance
  • 3 Waste product excretion
  • 4 Drug and hormone elimination/metabolism
  • 5 Blood pressure regulation
  • 6 Regulation of haematocrit
  • 7 regulation of calcium/phosphate balance
  • (vitamin D3 metabolism)

4
Clinical Estimation of renal function
  • Clinical examination
  • pallor, volume status, blood pressure
    measurement, urinalysis
  • Blood tests
  • Routine Tests
  • haemoglobin level
  • electrolyte measurement (Na ,K , Ca, PO4)
  • urea
  • creatinine normal range 70 to 140 µmol/l

5
Serum Creatinine and GFR
  • Muscle metabolite - concentration proportional
    to muscle mass
  • High muscular young men
  • Low conditions with muscle wasting
  • elderly
  • muscular dystrophy
  • Anorexia
  • malignancy
  • Normal range 70 to 140 µmol/litre

6
Serum Creatinine and GFR
Serum creatinine
Glomerular filtration rate (GFR)
7
GFR Estimation
  • Cockroft-Gault Formula
  • CrClFx(140-age)xweight/CreaP
  • F?1.04
  • F?1.23
  • Example
  • 85?, 55kg, Creatinine95
  • CrCl33ml/min
  • MDRD Formula

8
Tests of renal function cont.
  • 24h Urine sample-Creatinine clearance
  • chromium EDTA Clearance
  • gold standard Inulin clearance

9
The nephron and electrolyte handling
10
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11
Pharmacokinetics
  • Absorption
  • Distribution
  • Metabolism
  • Elimination
  • filtration
  • secretion

12
Diuretics
  • Loop
  • Thiazide
  • Aldosterone antagonist
  • Osmotic

13
Diuretics
  • Indications for use
  • heart failure ( acute or chronic )
  • pulmonary oedema
  • hypertension
  • nephrotic syndrome
  • hypercalcaemia
  • hypercalciuria

14
Loop diuretics
  • Frusemide, Bumetanide
  • Indication
  • Fluid overload
  • Hypertension
  • Hypercalcaemia
  • Mechanism of action
  • Blockade of NaK2Cl (NKCC2) transporter in the
    thick ascending loop of Henle

15
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16
Loop diuretics
  • Frusemide
  • oral bioavailability between 10 and 90
  • Acts at luminal side of thick ascending
    limb(NaK2Cl transporter)
  • Highly protein bound
  • Rebound after single dose
  • Half-life 4 hours

17
Loop diuretics continued
  • Caution
  • Electrolyte imbalance - hypokalaemia
  • Volume depletion (prerenal uremia)
  • Tinitus (acts within cochlea can synergise with
    aminoglycoside antibiotics)

18
Thiazide diuretics
  • Bendrofluazide, Metolazone
  • Site of action distal convoluted tubule
  • blocks electroneutral Na/Cl exchanger (NCCT)
  • Reaches site of action in glomerular filtrate
  • Higher doses required in low GFR (ineffective
    when serum creatinine gt200µM)
  • T ½ 3-5 hours

19
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20
Thiazides
  • Indications
  • Antihypertensive especially in combination with
    ACE inhibitor/ARB (AD)
  • In combination with loop diuretic for profound
    oedema
  • Cautions
  • Metabolic side effects hyperuricaemia, impaired
    glucose tolerance electrolyte disturbance
    (hypokalaemia and hyponatraemia)
  • Volume depletion

21
Major Outcomes in High Risk Hypertensive Patients
Randomized to Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme
Inhibitor or Calcium Channel Blocker vs Diuretic
The Antihypertensive and Lipid-Lowering Treatment
to Prevent Heart Attack Trial (ALLHAT)
The ALLHAT Collaborative Research Group Sponsored
by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
(NHLBI)
JAMA. 20022882981-2997
22
Cumulative Event Rates for the Primary Outcome
(Fatal CHD or Nonfatal MI) by ALLHAT Treatment
Group
Chlorthalidone Amlodipine Lisinopril
23
Overall Conclusions
Because of the superiority of thiazide-type
diuretics in preventing one or more major forms
of CVD and their lower cost, they should be the
drugs of choice for first-step antihypertensive
drug therapy.
24
Amiloride and Spironolactone
  • Amiloride
  • Blocks ENaC (channel for Na secretion in
    collecting duct under aldosterone control)
  • Spironolactone
  • Aldosterone receptor antagonist
  • Reaches DCT via blood stream (not dependent on
    GFR)
  • Often Combined with loop or thiazides to
    capitalise on K-sparing action

25
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26
Nephrotoxic Drugs
  • Dose dependant toxicity
  • NSAIDs including COX 2
  • Aminoglycosides
  • Radio opaque contrast materials
  • Idiosyncratic Renal Damage
  • NSAIDs
  • Penicillins
  • Gold, penicillamine

27
NSAIDs (Non-steroidal anti inflammatory drugs)
  • Commonly used
  • Interfere with prostaglandin production, disrupt
    regulation of renal medullary blood flow and salt
    water balance
  • Chronic renal impairment
  • Habitual use
  • Exacerbated by other drugs ( anti-hypertensives,
    ACE inhibitors)
  • Typical radiological features when advanced

28
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29
Aminoglycosides
  • Highly effective antimicrobials
  • Particularly useful in gram -ve sepsis
  • bactericidal
  • BUT
  • Nephrotoxic
  • Ototoxic
  • Narrow therapeutic range

30
Prescribing Aminoglycosides
  • Once daily regimen now recommended in patients
    with normal kidneys
  • High peak concentration enhances efficacy
  • long post dose effect
  • Single daily dose less nephrotoxic
  • Dose depends on size and renal function
  • Measure levels!

31
Intravenous contrast
  • Used commonly
  • CT scanning, IV urography, Angiography
  • Unsafe in patients with pre-existing renal
    impairment
  • Risk increased in diabetic nephropathy, heart
    failure dehydration
  • Can precipitate end-stage renal failure
  • Cumulative effect on repeated administration
  • Risk reduced by using Acetylcysteine ?
  • see N Engl J Med 2000 343180-184

32
Prescribing in Kidney Disease
  • Patients with renal impairment
  • Patients on Dialysis
  • Patients with renal transplants

33
Principles
  • Establish type of kidney disease
  • Most patients with kidney failure will already be
    taking a number of drugs
  • Interactions are common
  • Care needed to avoid drug toxicity
  • Patients with renal impairment and renal failure
  • Antihypertensives
  • Phosphate binders

34
Dosing in renal impairment
  • Loading dose does not change (usually)
  • Maintenance dose or dosing interval does
  • T ½ often prolonged
  • Reduce dose OR
  • Increase dosing interval
  • Some drugs have active metabolites that are
    themselves excreted renally
  • Warfarin, diazepam

35
Past Papers
  • Write short notes on the following
  • Spironolactone (Dec2000)
  • Amphotericin (June99)
  • Cyclosporin (June99)

36
Past Papers
  • Discuss the treatment of patients with
  • Digoxin toxicity
  • Lithium toxicity
  • Following both deliberate and Iatrogenic
    overdose.
  • Which treatments have been shown to improve
    survival?

37
Spironolactone
  • Class
  • Potassium sparing diuretic
  • Mode of action
  • Antagonises the effect of aldosterone at levels
    MR
  • Mineralocorticoid receptor (MR)aldosterone
    complex translocates to nucleus to affect gene
    transcription
  • Indication
  • Prevent hypokalaemia in patients taking diuretics
    or digoxin
  • Improves survival in advanced heart failure
    (RALES 1999 Randomised Aldactone Evaluation
    Study)
  • Antihypertensive (adjunctive third line therapy
    for hypertension or first line for conns
    patients)
  • Ascites in patients with cirrhosis

38
Spironolactone
  • Side effects
  • Antiandrogenic effects through the antagonism of
    DHT (testosterone) at its binding site.
  • Gynaecomastia, impotence, reduced libido
  • Interactions
  • Other potassium sparing drugs e.g. ACE
    inhibitors/ARBs potassium supplements (remember
    LoSalt used as NaCl substitute in cooking)

39
Amphotericin
  • Class
  • Anti fungal agent for topical and systemic use
  • Mode of action
  • Lipid soluble drug. Binds steroid alcohols
    (ergosterol) in the fungal cell membrane causing
    leakage of cellular content and death. Effective
    against candida species
  • Fungistatic or fungicidal depending on the
    concentration
  • Broad spectrum (candida, cryptosporidium)

40
Amphotericin
  • Indications
  • iv administration for systemic invasive fungal
    infections
  • Oral for GI mycosis
  • Side effects
  • Local/systemic effects with infusion (fever)
  • Chronic kidney dysfunction
  • Decline in GFR with prolonged use
  • Tubular dysfunction (membrane permeability)
  • Hypokalaemia, renal tubular acidosis (bicarb
    wasting type 1/distal), diabetes insipidus,
    hypomagnesaemia
  • Pre hydration/saline loading may avoid problems
  • Toxicity can be reduced substantially by
    liposomal packing of Amphotericin

41
Lithium toxicity
  • Lithium carbonate - Rx for bipolar affective
    disorder
  • Toxicity closely related to serum levels
  • Symptoms
  • CVS arrhythmias (especially junctional
    dysrrythmias)
  • CNS tremor confusion - coma
  • Treatment
  • Supportive - Haemodialysis and colonic
    irrigation for severe levels
  • Inadvertent intoxication from interaction with
    ACEI loop/thiazide diuretic
  • Carbamezepine and other anti epileptics increase
    neurotoxicity

42
Digoxin toxicity
  • Incidence
  • High levels demonstrated in 10 and toxicity
    reported in 4 of a series of 4000 digoxin
    samples
  • Kinetics
  • large volume of distribution (reservoir is
    skeletal muscle)
  • about 30 of stores excreted in urine/day

43
Treatment of digoxin toxicity
  • Supportive
  • Correction of electrolyte imbalances
  • Atropine for bradycardia avoid cardio stimulants
    because arrythmogenic
  • Limitation of absorption
  • Charcoal effective within 8 hours (or
    cholestyramine)
  • Specific measures
  • DIGIBIND Fab digoxin specific antibodies. Binds
    plasma digoxin and complex eliminated by kidneys
    (used when OD is high/near arrest)
  • Enhanced elimination
  • Dialysis is ineffective. Charcoal/cholestyramine
    interrupt enterohepatic cycling.
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