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Oliveira, Silva, Barbieri, Oliveira, Lobo, Lima, Zanetta, Burdmann, ASN 2005 ... M. Vieira Jr. Jo o F. P. Oliveira. Adriana I. Joaquim. Wilson J. Q. Santos ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Slide sem ttulo


1
FACULDADE DE MEDICINA DE SÃO JOSÉ DO RIO PRETO
Nefrotoxicidade Medicamentosa
Disciplina de Nefrologia
Emmanuel A. Burdmann
2
  • decreased GFR
  • decreased renal reserve
  • decreased RBF
  • vasculature changes
  • tubular changes
  • drug excretion changes

3
370,000 inhabitant Brazilian city
1717 selected individuals 1306 with Clcr
23.4 with Clcr
306
Burdmann, Cipullo et al WCN 2007
4
Low ClCr - Age
37.7
Low ClCr ()
2.5
295
11

50y
Burdmann, Cipullo et al WCN 2007
5
Low ClCr Age and Blood Pressure
  • 50y 874 subjects
  • 367 normal BP
  • 507 hypertension 58

p 0.04
Low Clcr ()
37.7
28
Normal BP
Hypertension
Burdmann, Cipullo et al WCN 2007
6
NEFROTOXICIDADE MEDICAMENTOSA
  • Prevalência e evolução
  • Drogas mais comuns
  • Aminoglicosídeos
  • Contraste
  • AINHs
  • Bloqueadores EC
  • Conclusão
  • Mecanismos
  • Frequência
  • Fatores de risco
  • Quadro clínico
  • Prevenção

7
58.818.3 y
58.920.1 y
58 (11)
265 (51)
201 (38)
NEPHROTOXICITY
ISCHEMIA
259/524 ATN drugs (with ischemia or alone)
Santos et al Crit Care 10R68, 2006
8

?
AKI
CKD
9
Contrast Induced AKI Effect on Mortality
  • 16,248 pts
  • 183 AKI
  • 174 paired subjects

p
Death OR 5.5(2.91-13.19)
Mortality ()
Levy EM et al, JAMA 1996
10
Aminoglycoside nephrotoxicity in the ICU -
Mortality
Mortality ()
93/209
44/151
Oliveira, Silva, Barbieri, Oliveira, Lobo, Lima,
Zanetta, Burdmann, ASN 2005
11
Drug Nephrotoxicity

107/393 patients
Burdmann et al in Insuficiência Renal Aguda,
Schor, Boim and dos Santos, 1997
12
DRUG NEPHROPATHY - PUBMED
13
DRUGS NEPHROTOXICITY
  • AMINOGLYCOSIDES

14
AMINOGLYCOSIDE NEPHROTOXICITY
10 - 20 of therapeutic courses
  • ENZYMURIA - (NAG, AAP, ?-GT)
  • TUBULAR PROTEINURIA
  • FANCONIS SYNDROME
  • CA AND MG TUBULAR DEFECTS
  • IMPAIRED ACID EXCRETION AND
  • AMMONIA GENERATION
  • TUBULAR RESISTANCE TO ADH
  • ATN 7-10 DAYS, NON-OLIGURIC

15
AMINOGLYCOSIDE NEPHROTOXICITY
RISK FACTORS ?
  • ADVANCED AGE
  • PROLONGED EXPOSURE
  • VOLUME CONTRACTION
  • PREEXISTING RENAL INSUFFICIENCY
  • CONCOMITANT NEPHROTOXIN EXPOSURE
  • (CsA, contrast, AmB, cephalosporins, vanco)
  • POTASSIUM DEPLETION
  • ACIDOSIS
  • CONCURRENT HEPATOTOXICITY

16
Prevalence and risk factors for AG
nephrotoxicity in the ICU
  • 360 consecutive ICU pts
  • AKI GFR decrease from baseline20
  • AKI 209 pts 58
  • Mortality 44.5 vs. 29.1 (p0.0031)

Oliveira, Silva, Barbieri, Oliveira, Lobo, Lima,
Zanetta, Burdmann, ASN 2005
17
Prevalence and risk factors for AG
nephrotoxicity in the ICU
Oliveira, Silva, Barbieri, Oliveira, Lobo, Lima,
Zanetta, Burdmann, ASN 2005
18
Bactericidal activity
Single DD
Post-antibiotic effect
Multiple DD
Serum concentration
toxicity
t o x i c i t y
Time
19
Aminoglycoside NephrotoxicityCircadian Variations
  • 221 pts
  • Gentamicin
  • or
  • Tobramycin
  • Midnight to 730 AM

O.D.
Increase in Nephrotoxicity
Prins et al, Clin Pharmacol Ther, 1997
20
Aminoglycoside Nephrotoxicity Pharmacokinetic
Dosing
  • Pharmacokinetic group 43 pts
  • Fixed OD dosage 38 pts
  • Gentamicin or Amikacin
  • Renal toxicity 25 in SCr or SCr 1.4 mg/dL

Mortality ()
Nephrotoxicity ()
Bartal C et al, Am J Med 2003
21
Economic Impact of Aminoglycoside ToxicityDrug
Monitoring
  • Nephrotoxicity
  • US 4,583.00/patient
  • Therapeutic drug monitoring
  • US 301.87/patient
  • TDM of 100 patients
  • US 30,187.00
  • If nephrotoxicity 6.6
  • US 30,284.00 saving

Slaughter and Cappelletty, Pharmacoeconomics,
1998
22
Radiocontrast
23
(No Transcript)
24
Contrast Nephrotoxicity Risk Factors
Cr 1.5 mg/dl
Erley CM and Porter GA. In Clinical
Nephrotoxins, De Broe et al, 2003
25
(No Transcript)
26
Effect of Furosemide on Contrast Nephrotoxicity
Weinstein et col, Nephron 1992
27
Prevention of Contrast Nephrotoxicity in Patients
With CRF
11
28
40
Solomon et col, N Engl J Med, 1994
28
Contrast Nephrotoxicity - Hydration Regimen
0.9 Saline (n 809) 0.45 Sodium Chloride (n
811)
0.45
0.45
0.45
0.9
0.9
0.9
Mueller et al, Arch Intern Med 2002
29
Prevention of Contrast-Induced Nephropathy With
Sodium Bicarbonate A Randomized Controlled Trial
  • Prospective, randomized
  • iopamidol administration (370 mg iodine/mL).
  • 119 patients
  • 59 sodium chloride
  • 60 sodium bicarbonate
  • 154-mEq/L infusion
  • 3 mL/kg per hour for 1 hour before contrast,
    followed by 1 mL/kg per hour for 6 hours during
    and after the procedure.

2
17
Merten et al, JAMA 2004
30
Nephrotoxicity of Nonionic and Ionic Contrast
Media in 1196 Patients a Randomized Trial
Nephrotoxicity Cr increase 1.0 mg/dL 48-72
hours after contrast
()
Rudnick et col, Kidney Int 1995
31
Contrast nephrotoxicity Iso (iodixanol) vs.
low-osmolar (iohexol)
Iohexol
Iodixanol
0.5 mg/dl
1.0 mg/dl
Peak Increase in Serum Creatinine Concentration
Aspelin et al, N Engl J Med 2003
32
Radiocontrast Nephrotoxicity Acetylcysteine
SCr change after 48 hrs
Incidence of Nephrotoxicity
()
D SCr (mg/dl)
30

1.0
0.01
20
0.5
10
0.0
0
Placebo
Acty
-0.5
Placebo
Acty
Tepel et al, N Engl J Med 343 180, 2000
33
Systematic review of the impact of
N-acetylcysteine on contrast nephropathy
P
Pannu N et al, Kidney Int 2004
34
Systematic review of the impact of
N-acetylcysteine on contrast nephropathy
NAC may reduce the incidence of acutely increased
serum creatinine after administration of
intravenous contrast, but this finding was of
borderline statistical significance, and there
was significant heterogeneity between trials.
Before NAC becomes the standard of care for all
patients receiving intravenous contrast, new
randomized trials evaluating its effect on
clinically relevant outcomes are required.
Pannu et al, Kidney Int 2004
35
The value of N-acetylcysteine in the prevention
of radiocontrast agent-induced nephropathy seems
questionable.
  • 50 healthy volunteers
  • NAC was administered orally at a dose of 600 mg
    every 12 h, for a total of four doses
  • There was a significant decrease in the mean
    serum creatinine concentration (P significant increase in the eGFR (P after the last dose of NAC.

Hoffmann et al, JASN 2004
36
CONTRAST NEPHROTOXICITY - HEMOFILTRATION
Marenzi G et al, N Engl J Med, 2003
37
Gadolinium-based contrast agents and
nephrotoxicity in patients undergoing coronary
artery procedures.
  • Pts with SCr 2.0 mg/dl and/or CrCl 40 ml/min.
  • 25 pts received gadolinium-based contrast vs 32
    pts with iodinated iso-osmolality contrast agent
    selected from database (control group).
  • Prophylactic 0.45 saline intravenously and NAC
    (1.2 g PO twice daily).
  • Similar baseline creatinine and creatinine
    clearance (Gadolinium 2.30 mg/dl and 33 ml/min
    vs. Iodinated 2.24 mg/dl and 30 ml/min).
  • Increase Scr 0.5 mg/dl (48 hr) in 28 of the
    Gadolinium group vs. 6.5 in the iodinated group
    (p 0.034).
  • Renal failure requiring temporary dialysis in 8
    of the Gadolinium group and in 0 in the
    iodinated group (p 0.19).

Briguori C et al, Catheter Cardiovasc Interv 2006
38
Gadolinium contrast media are more nephrotoxic
than iodine media. The importance of osmolality
in direct renal artery injections
Barbara Elmståhl , Ulf Nyman, Peter Leander,
Chun-Ming Chai, Klaes Golman, Jonas Björk and
Torsten Almén
  • Gadodiamide (0.78 Osm/kg H(2)O) Vs iohexol (0.42
    Osm/kg H(2)O).
  • Renal artery of eight left-sided nephrectomized
    pigs.
  • Plasma half-life of a GFR marker was used to
    compare effects 1-3 h post-injection.
  • Iohexol molecules were less nephrotoxic than the
    Gd-CM molecules.

Eur Radiol. 2006 Aug 5 Epub ahead of print
39
Thomsen HS, Nephrol Dial Transplant 20 Suppl 1
i18, 2005
40
NSAIDs
41
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42
Association of Selective and Conventional
Nonsteroidal Antiinflammatory Drugs with Acute
Renal Failure A Population-based, Nested
Case-Control Analysis
  • Administrative health care databases, Quebec,
    Canada, 19992002.
  • 121,722 new NSAID users 65 y
  • 4,228 cases of AKI
  • 1.48 cases/100 person-years
  • Case fatality 47.3
  • 84,540 controls (matched age, follow-up time)
  • Conditional logistic regression, adjusted for
    sex, age,
  • health status, health care utilization measures,
    exposure to contrast agents, and nephrotoxic
    medications.

Schneider et al, Am J Epidemiol, Epub Sep 2006
43
Association of Selective and Conventional
Nonsteroidal Antiinflammatory Drugs with Acute
Renal Failure A Population-based, Nested
Case-Control Analysis
Schneider et al, Am J Epidemiol, Epub Sep 2006
44
NSAIDs Nephrotoxicity
Whelton et al In Clinical Nephrotoxins, De Broe
et al, 2003
45
NSAID-induced AKI in hepatic cirrhosis
Zipser et al, J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1979
46
Concomitant Use of Two or More NSAIDs - Side
Effects
Clinard F et al, Eur J Clin Pharmacol 2004
47
NSAIDs NEPHROTOXICITY - TACROLIMUS
1.5
1.5
1.0
1.0

GFFR (ml/min/100 g)

0.5
0.5
SD
RO
VH
FK
FKSD
FKRO
RO
VH
FK
FKRO
SD sodium diclofenac RO rofecoxib FK
tacrolimus
Soubhia, Mendes, Mendonça, Cipullo, Burdmann,
Am J Nephrol 2005
48
CKD long-term use of NSAIDs
  • prospective study
  • 259 heavy analgesic users, 11-year-period
  • 69 new cases of analgesic nephropathy with renal
    papillary necrosis
  • 42 excessive quantities of NSAIDs alone
  • 13 NSAIDs in combinations with paracetamol,
    aspirin, phenacetin, caffeine, and/or traditional
    herbal medications.
  • amount of NSAIDs ranged from 1,000 to 26,600
    capsules or tablets over a 2- to 25-year period.
  • SCr 126 to 778 mumol/L in 64.8.

Segasothy et al, Am J Kidney Dis 1994
49
(No Transcript)
50
(No Transcript)
51
ACE Inhibitor Nephrotoxicity
De Jong in Clinical Nephrotoxins, De Broe et al,
2003
52
ACE Inhibitors Induced AKI
  • Acute medical unit
  • 2,398 consecutive admissions
  • 89 pts (3.7) with SCradm ³ 200 µmol/L
  • 9 on regular dialysis
  • 30/80 (37.5) on ACE inhibitors
  • 6/30 (20) diarrhea and/or vomiting

SCr (µmol/L)
Stirling C et al, J Hum Hypertens 2003
53
Renal Impairment vs Prescribing Behavior
  • French teaching hospital
  • 71/118 residents questionnaire
  • Drug prescription in 4 patients with renal
    impairment
  • Order
  • Gentamicin
  • Diclofenac
  • Amlodipine
  • 4th drug to start (enalapril) 3 doses or not
    prescribing
  • Inappropriate order (renal function)
  • Gentamicin 62
  • Diclofenac 42
  • Enalapril 52
  • Inadequate decrease of amlodipine 28

Maintain or discontinue or change dosage
Salomon L et al, Int J Qual Health Care 2003
54
DRUGS NEPHROTOXICITY
  • Costly
  • Deadly
  • Predictable
  • Preventable !!!

55
  • Avoid drug, when possible
  • Baseline renal function
  • Monitoring renal function
  • Hydration
  • Specific maneuvers

PREVENTION OF DRUGS NEPHROTOXICITY
56
  • Glória Elisa
  • Dirce M. T. Zanetta
  • José P. Cipullo
  • Maria A. Baptista
  • Rosa Soubhia
  • Vera Ramalho
  • Ivan M. Araujo
  • José M. Vieira Jr
  • João F. P. Oliveira
  • Adriana I. Joaquim
  • Wilson J. Q. Santos
  • William Bennett
  • Takeshi Andoh
  • Jessie Lindsley
  • Richard Johson
  • Luis Yu
  • Isac de Castro
  • Benedito J. Pereira
  • Terezila Coimbra
  • Suzana Lobo
  • Emerson Q. Lima
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