Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a growing epidemic affecting 10% of the population worldwide. Significantly, diabetic kidney disease (DKD) is the main cause of CKD and affects approximately 40% of patients with diabetes. Approximately 10% of patients with early-stage CKD and approximately half of patients with advanced-stage CKD suffer progression to renal failure and require dialysis or transplantation to survive. Moreover, DKD progresses particularly rapidly and has a poor prognosis, accounting for almost 50% of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) cases. Dialysis in particular is a burdensome therapy associated with poor patient outcomes and high societal and economic costs. Clinical studies using RIP have demonstrated protection against ischemic target renal damage in a variety of acute and chronic clinical settings . In the renal setting, RIP performed in dialysis patients is known to abrogate brain, heart and liver ischemia occurring during hemodialysis treatments. RIP may play a role in reducing the incidence of cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury. However, whether RIP can improve the renal function of patients with DKD is unclear and is worthy of further study. Our overarching hypothesis is that RIP, performed in DKD patients, could delay progression to renal failure by abrogating progressive ischemic damage in the failing kidney. The present proposal is a pilot study addressing this hypothesis and is aimed at generating proof-of-concept and feasibility data on the benefits of RIP in patients with DKD.
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a growing epidemic affecting 10% of the population worldwide. Significantly, diabetic kidney disease (DKD) is the main cause of CKD and affects approximately 40% of patients with diabetes. Approximately 10% of patients with early-stage CKD and approximately half of patients with advanced-stage CKD suffer progression to renal failure and require dialysis or transplantation to survive. Moreover, DKD progresses particularly rapidly and has a poor prognosis, accounting for almost 50% of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) cases. Dialysis in particular is a burdensome therapy associated with poor patient outcomes and high societal and economic costs. Strategies to prevent progression to renal failure focus on exquisite blood pressure control, renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) inhibition for proteinuria DKD, and glycemic control with the use of sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 (SGLT-2) inhibitors in patients with diabetes. Even so, despite the optimization of these parameters, many high-risk DKD patients will progress to renal failure. Recurrent ischemic damage to the failing and fibrotic kidney appears to be one of the final common pathways of progressive kidney damage in late-stage DKD, irrespective of the original cause of kidney disease. Specific strategies to alter this pathway in DKD have not yet been developed. In this context, it is crucial to seek novel pharmaceutical or nonpharmaceutical approaches to optimize the treatment of DKD. With the progression of DKD, renal interstitial fibrosis intensifies, leading to severe ischemia and hypoxia of kidney cells and ultimately leading to ESRD. Therefore, effectively delaying the process of renal fibrosis can slow or even reverse the process of DKD. Hypoxia is characterized by an insufficient supply of oxygen to organs, and hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) regulates gene transcription in hypoxia. Appropriate renal hypoxia can activate HIF-1α and suppress HIF-2α, improving the ability of the kidney to adapt to hypoxia, reducing transforming growth factor (TGF)-β pathway activity and further inhibiting fibrosis development. Therefore, increasing the expression of HIF-1 in renal tissue may be a new method to delay renal interstitial fibrosis and the progression of DKD to ESRD. Previous studies have provided evidence that HIF-1α participates in remote ischemic preconditioning (RIP). HIF-1α levels are significantly increased in the peripheral blood after RIP is implemented. Therefore, we speculated that RIP may have a therapeutic effect on DKD. Ischemic conditioning occurs when a transient episode of ischemia reduces the effect of a subsequent larger ischemic insult. Similar levels of protection can be achieved by RIP. RIP is a noninvasive physical therapy that induces remote vital organs to adapt to ischemia through repeated, short-term ischemia-reperfusion training on nonvital organs such as limbs, thereby improving their tolerance to ischemic injury and enabling them to withstand subsequent fatal ischemic events. Clinical studies using RIP have demonstrated protection against ischemic target renal damage in a variety of acute and chronic clinical settings. In the renal setting, RIP performed in dialysis patients is known to abrogate brain, heart and liver ischemia occurring during hemodialysis treatments. RIP may play a role in reducing the incidence of cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury. However, whether RIP can improve the renal function of patients with DKD is unclear and is worthy of further study. Our overarching hypothesis is that RIP, performed in DKD patients, could delay progression to renal failure by abrogating progressive ischemic damage in the failing kidney. The present proposal is a pilot study addressing this hypothesis and is aimed at generating proof-of-concept and feasibility data on the benefits of RIP in patients with DKD.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
60
RIC is a non-invasive therapy that performed by an electric auto-control device with cuff placed on arm. RIC procedures consist of five cycles of 5-min inflation (200 mmHg) and 5-min deflation of cuff on bilateral arm. The procedure will be performed twice daily for consecutive 6 months after enrollment.
Sham RIC will be performed by the same electric auto-control device with cuff placed on arm. Sham RIC procedures consist of five cycles of 5-min inflation (60 mmHg) and 5-min deflation of cuff on bilateral arm. The procedure will be performed twice daily for consecutive 6 months after enrollment.
Standard medication therapy will be performed according to the national and international guidelines.
The tolerability of RIC in patients with DKD
Patients who complete at least of twice a day up to 5 months of RIC treatment are considered to be tolerable of RIC.
Time frame: 0-6 months
ΔSerum creatinine
Changes of serum creatinine before and after the intervention. Serum creatinine is one of biomarkers of CKD progression, which is tested in fasting serum.
Time frame: 0-6 months
ΔSerum Cystatin C
Changes of serum Cystatin C before and after the intervention. Serum Cystatin C is one of biomarkers of CKD progression, which is tested in fasting serum.
Time frame: 0-6 months
ΔHemoglobin
Changes of hemoglobin before and after the intervention. Hemoglobin is used to evaluate renal anemia in CKD patients.
Time frame: 0-6 months
ΔSerum KIM-1
Changes of serum KIM-1 before and after the intervention. Serum kidney injury molecule-1 (KIM-1) is the biomarker of renal tubule injury.
Time frame: 0-6 months
ΔUrine microalbumin-creatinine ratio
Changes of urine microalbumin-creatinine ratio before and after the intervention. Urine microalbumin-creatinine ratio is the diagnostic as well as the disease progression biomarker of CKD.
Time frame: 0-6 months
ΔEstimated glomerular filtration rate
Changes of Estimated glomerular filtration rate before and after the intervention. Estimated glomerular filtration rate is calculated using the CKD-EPI equation by serum creatinine and Cystatin C.
Time frame: 0-6 months
ΔSerum VEGF
Changes of serum VEGF before and after the intervention. Serum vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is related to the mechanism of RIC.
Time frame: 0-6 months
ΔSerum HIF-1
Changes of serum HIF-1 before and after the intervention. Hypoxia inducible factor-1 (HIF-1) is related to the mechanism of RIC and CKD progression.
Time frame: 0-6 months
Δurine protein
Changes o furine protein before and after the intervention. Urine protein is related to the mechanism of RIC and CKD progression.
Time frame: 0-6 months
Incidence of major adverse cerebral and cardiac events
Myocardial infarction or stroke will be evaluated by professional investigators.
Time frame: 0-6 months
Incidence of Kidney failure
Clinical outcome; to observe the proportion of patients who requires dialysis or transplantation.
Time frame: 0-6 months
Incidence of all-cause death
Clinical outcome; to observe the proportion of all patients who died in each group.
Time frame: 0-6 months
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