Effects of the N/L-type calcium channel blocker cilnidipine on nephropathy and uric acid metabolism in hypertensive patients with chronic kidney disease (J-CIRCLE study).

Journal: Journal Of Clinical Hypertension (Greenwich, Conn.)
Published:
Abstract

This study assessed the urinary albumin/creatinine ratio (ACR) and uric acid metabolism in 70 hypertensive patients with chronic kidney disease in whom urinary ACR had remained ≥30 mg/g under the treatment of the L-type calcium channel blocker amlodipine. Three months after switching to the N/L-type calcium channel blocker cilnidipine, blood pressure (BP) did not change; however, urinary ACR significantly decreased with cilnidipine. Serum uric acid levels showed no significant change. In cases where uric acid production had been high (urinary uric acid/creatinine ratio ≥0.5), the urinary uric acid/creatinine ratio decreased significantly after cilnidipine treatment, suggesting that cilnidipine can suppress excessive uric acid formation. These results suggest that switching from amlodipine to cilnidipine results in a significant reduction in urinary ACR as well as significant reduction in uric acid production. Thus, cilnidipine is more useful than amlodipine in improving albuminuria and uric acid metabolism in hypertensive patients with chronic kidney disease.

Authors
Shunya Uchida, Masato Takahashi, Masahiro Sugawara, Tomoaki Saito, Kazuhiko Nakai, Masami Fujita, Koichi Mochizuki, Isu Shin, Takashi Morita, Tomoyuki Hikita, Hironao Itakura, Yuko Takahashi, Shigeki Mizuno, Yasumi Ohno, Kageki Ito, Takafumi Ito, Masayoshi Soma