Effects of spironolactone and chlorthalidone on cardiovascular structure and function in chronic kidney disease

Nicky Edwards, Anna Price, Samir Mehta, Thomas F Hiemstra, Amreen Kaur, Peter J. Greasley , David J Webb, Neeraj Dhaun, Iain M MacIntyre, Tariq Farrah , Vanessa Melville , Anna Herrey , Gemma Slinn, Becky Wale, Natalie Rowland, David Wheeler, Ian Wilkinson, Richard Steeds, Charles Ferro, Jon Townend

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Abstract

Background and objectives: In a randomized double blind, placebo controlled trial, treatment with spironolactone in early-stage chronic kidney disease, reduced left ventricular mass and arterial stiffness compared to placebo. It is not known if these effects were due to blood pressure reduction or specific vascular and myocardial effects of spironolactone.

Design, setting, participants and measurements: A prospective, randomized, open-label, blinded endpoint (PROBE) study conducted in four UK centers (Birmingham, Cambridge, Edinburgh & London) comparing spironolactone 25mg to chlorthalidone 25mg once daily for 40 weeks in 154 subjects with non-diabetic stage 2 and 3 chronic kidney disease (eGFR 30-89ml/min/1.73m2). The primary endpoint was change in left ventricle mass on cardiac magnetic resonance. Subjects were on treatment with an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor or angiotensin receptor blocker and had controlled blood pressure.

Results: There was no significant difference in left ventricular mass regression; at week 40 the adjusted mean difference for spironolactone compared to chlorthalidone was -3.8g (95% CI -8.1g, 0.5g), p=0.08. Office and 24-hour ambulatory blood pressures fell in response to both drugs with no significant differences between treatment. Arterial stiffness parameters were also not significantly different between groups. Hyperkalemia (defined ≥5.4mmol/L) occurred more frequently with spironolactone (12 vs. 2 subjects) but there were no cases of severe hyperkalemia (defined ≥6.5mmol/L). A decline in eGFR >30% occurred more frequently with chlorthalidone (8 vs. 2 subjects).

Conclusion: Spironolactone was not superior to chlorthalidone in reducing left ventricular mass, blood pressure or arterial stiffness in non-diabetic CKD.
Original languageEnglish
Article numberCJN.01930221
JournalClinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology
Volume16
Issue number8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 30 Aug 2021

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