Chronic Kidney Disease: Strategies to Retard Progression
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Risks of CKD Progression
3. Epithelial–Mesenchymal Transition (EMT)
4. Avoidance of Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) in Patients with CKD
Identification of Factors Causing AKI
5. An Etiology-Based Treatment Strategy for CKD
5.1. Glomerulopathy
5.2. DM-Related CKD
6. Hypertension-Related CKD
6.1. Heart Failure (HF)-Related CKD
6.2. Nephrolithiasis and Urothithiasis
6.3. Autosomal Dominant Polycystic Kidney Disease (ADPKD)
6.4. Autosomal Dominant Tubulointerstitial Kidney Disease (ADTKD)
6.5. Patients with Graft Kidney
7. Management of CKD Complications
7.1. Metabolic Acidosis
7.2. Low Protein Diet with Ketoanalogues
7.3. Anemia
7.4. Hyperkalemia
8. Specific Issues of CKD
8.1. Novel Therapeutic Approaches
8.2. Mesenchymal Stem Cells and Their Conditioned Media
9. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Categories | Mechanism | Examples | Evaluation |
---|---|---|---|
Prerenal | Cardiac output↓ | Acute myocardial infarction, valve rupture, acute pericarditis, acute myocarditis Drugs exacerbate heart failure (COX inhibitors, CCB, TZD, DPP-4i) Drugs cause direct heart injury (rheumatologic agents (e.g., TNF-α inhibitors), anthracyclines, taxanes, targeted therapy (e.g., bevacizumab, sorafenib), anti-Parkinson (Pergolide, Pramipexole) | History: fever, vomiting, diarrhea, chest pain, orthopnea, palpitation, urine output↓, liver/CV diseases Drug: diuretics, NSAID Physical exam: BP↓/HR↑, skin turgor/mucosa, edema |
True hypovolemia | Renal loss (diuretics, osmotic diuresis); Extrarenal loss (diarrhea, hemorrhage, burn, third spacing) | ||
Effective volume↓ | Sepsis, neurogenic shock, anaphylaxis | ||
Intrarenal vasoconstriction | Hypercalcemia, hepatorenal syndrome, drugs (CNIs, NSAID, vasoconstrictors.) | ||
Intrinsic | Glomerular injury | Nephrotic (MCD, MPGN, drugs (NSAID, gold, penicillamine))213607Nephritic (IRGN, lupus nephritis, AAV, anti-GBM disease, IgAN, drugs (e.g., hydralazine)) | History: Fever, cellulitis, URI, flank pain, foamy urine, urine output↓, myalgia, hemoptysis Drug: antibiotics, NSAID, statin, contrast Physical exam: BP, Skin rash, arthritis |
Tubular injury | Severe prerenal causes, toxins (endogenous: hemolysis, rhabdomyolysis, tumor lysis syndrome) or exogenous (aminoglycoside, contrast, CNIs, acyclovir, lithium, vancomycin)) | ||
Interstitial injury | Allergy (drug: cephalosporin, penicillin, PPI, NSAID, herbs); Infection (bacteria, fungus, virus, leptospirosis); Autoimmune (Lupus, anti-TBM disease, AAV) | ||
Vascular injury | Small caliber (TMA (malignant hypertension, HUS/TTP, DIC), scleroderma renal crisis) Large caliber (renal infarction, renal vein thrombosis) | ||
Postrenal | Urinary tract | Benign prostatic hyperplasia; neurogenic bladder; Intra-ureter (stones, tumors); Extraureter (retroperitoneal fibrosis, intra-abdominal tumors) lesions | History: low urinary tract symptoms, gross hematuria Physical exam: suprapubic tenderness, abdomen mass Image: e.g., ultrasound |
Intrarenal | Crystals (acyclovir, indinavir), stones, tumors, paraproteins (myeloma) |
Non-Immune Therapy | Immunosuppressant Therapy | Denote | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
↓Dietary salt/protein SGLT2 inhibitors RAAS blockades Blood pressure Infection prophylaxis (vaccine, antibioticsantiviral agents) Vitamin D + calcium | Diuretics ↑Oncotic pressure (albumin infusion) Lipid lowering Anticoagulation (prevent or treat thromboembolism) | Steroids | Calcineurin inhibitors | Antimetabolite | Alkalizing agents | Anti-CD20 | PP | ||
Prednisolone ACTH | Cyclosporine Tacrolimus | Mycophenolate Azathioprine | CYC Chlorambucil | Rituximab | |||||
MCD | ν | ν | ν | ν | ν | ν | ν | ||
FSGS | ν | ν | ν | ν | ν | Genetic test: Congenital/infantile type, APOL1 (adult) | |||
MN | ν | ν | ν | ν | ν | ν | ν | Serum anti-PLA2R: diagnosis, follow-up and outcomes | |
MPGN | ν | ν | ν | ν | Treat underlying diseases (e.g., MM, lymphoma or HCV) | ||||
IgAN | ν | ν (IgAN+MCD) | ν | ν (some RTCs) | Adjuvant antimalarial Ongoing trial: Fostamatinib, Atacicept, Bortezomib | ||||
LN | ν | ν (class V) | ν | ν | ν | ν | Antimalarial agents AZA for maintenance | ||
AAV | ν | ν | ν | ν | ν severe AKI PH | Disease activity: chemokine C-X-C motif chemokine ligand 13, matrix metalloproteinase-3, tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-1 | |||
Ani-GBM | ν | ν | ν | ν till anti-GBM (-) | Overlap syndrome (ANA, ANCA) | ||||
Common S/E | Rare | Rare | ↑Glucose Cushing ↑BP | Nephrotoxic | GI upset Leukopenia | Bone marrow suppression Infertility | Infusion reaction, Infection Cytopenia | Fever Urticaria |
Categories | Agents | Mechanism |
---|---|---|
Anti-fibrotic | Pirfenidone | TGF-β inhibitor |
Fresolimumab | Anti-TGF-β monoclonal antibody | |
FG3019 | Anti-CTGF monoclonal antibody | |
Anti-oxidative stress | Bardoxolone methyl | Activating Nrf-2 and inhibiting NF-κB pathway |
Probucol | Phenolic antioxidant | |
Anti-inflammatory | Adalimumab | Anti-TNF-α monoclonal antibody |
Infliximab | Anti-TNF-α monoclonal antibody | |
Etanercept | soluble recombinant receptor targeting TNF-α | |
Rilonacept | Anti-IL-1 monoclonal antibody | |
Signal transduction pathway | Ruboxistaurin | PKCβ inhibitor |
Selonsertib | ASK1 inhibitor | |
Fasudil | Rho kinase inhibitor | |
Vasoactive agents | Avosentan | ET type A receptor antagonist |
Atrasentan | ET type A receptor antagonist | |
Sitaxsentan | ET type A receptor antagonist | |
Bosentan | Dual ET type A and B antagonist | |
Sparsentan | Selective dual antagonist of AT1 receptor and the ET type A receptor. | |
Phosphodiesterase inhibitor | PF-00489791 | Phosphodiesterase V inhibitor |
Cell-cell/cell-matrix interaction | GCS-100 | Galectin-3 inhibitor |
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Yan, M.-T.; Chao, C.-T.; Lin, S.-H. Chronic Kidney Disease: Strategies to Retard Progression. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2021, 22, 10084. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms221810084
Yan M-T, Chao C-T, Lin S-H. Chronic Kidney Disease: Strategies to Retard Progression. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2021; 22(18):10084. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms221810084
Chicago/Turabian StyleYan, Ming-Tso, Chia-Ter Chao, and Shih-Hua Lin. 2021. "Chronic Kidney Disease: Strategies to Retard Progression" International Journal of Molecular Sciences 22, no. 18: 10084. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms221810084
APA StyleYan, M. -T., Chao, C. -T., & Lin, S. -H. (2021). Chronic Kidney Disease: Strategies to Retard Progression. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 22(18), 10084. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms221810084