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INNOVATIVE METHODOLOGY
1Cardiorenal Research Laboratory, Mayo Clinic and Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, Minnesota; 2New Orleans Center for Clinical Research, New Orleans, Louisiana; and 3Otsuka Maryland Research Institute, Rockville, Maryland
Submitted 12 May 2005 ; accepted in final form 22 September 2005
| ABSTRACT |
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congestive heart failure; V2-receptor antagonism; aquaretics
Loop diuretics have for decades been a mainstay to treat congestion by inhibiting sodium reabsorption in the loop of Henle with the secondary action of passively increasing the excretion of water. As saluretics, loop diuretics may become less efficient in the setting of hyponatremia and may worsen hyponatremia. Furthermore, despite the widespread and long history of use of diuretics in CHF, some detrimental actions of diuretics continue to emerge. Importantly, by increasing distal tubular delivery of sodium, loop diuretics activate the tubuloglomerular feedback mechanism, which causes vasoconstriction of the afferent arteriole and a reduction in renal blood flow (RBF) (3, 13, 26). Thus loop diuretics may compromise renal function, which has been identified in retrospective analyses as a powerful predictive factor for CHF mortality (6). Potassium-wasting diuretics, which have been associated with increased mortality, can also lead to serum potassium depletion, which, in turn, can promote arrhythmias (4, 5). This has prompted efforts to develop more physiological strategies to treat volume overload.
Similar to other neurohormones that are activated in CHF, circulating arginine vasopressin (AVP) is elevated in patients with CHF (12). AVP, a nonapeptide, is secreted by the posterior pituitary gland in response to reduced cardiopulmonary blood volume, reduced systolic blood pressure, or increased plasma osmolality. AVP acts via three receptor types: V1A, V1B (or V3), and V2. V1A receptors are located in vascular smooth muscle cells, where they mediate vasoconstriction, and in the myocardium, where they may affect hypertrophy (24). V1B receptors are located in the anterior pituitary and mediate adrenocorticotropin release. V2 receptors are located in the renal collecting duct, where AVP binding to the V2 receptor leads to a rise in intracellular cAMP. This promotes renal water reabsorption via translocation of intracellular vesicles containing the water channel aquaporin-2 into the apical plasma membrane and increased transcription of aquaporin-2 (19). Taken together, it would appear as though blocking the renal effects of AVP with a selective V2-receptor antagonist would produce a diuresis and maintain renal function by antagonizing elevated endogenous AVP levels rather than unphysiologically blocking sodium reabsorption.
Tolvaptan, which is named OPC-41061 in earlier literature, is a modified benzazepine derivative that acts as a selective V2-receptor antagonist (Fig. 1). Its synthesis has been described in detail by Kondo et al. (14). The potent aquaretic properties of this V2 antagonist in rats and its pharmacological profile were reported by Yamamura et al. (27). Its oral availability now permits studies in humans that address the physiological significance of the V2 receptor in human CHF and also the development of a V2 antagonist as therapeutic agents.
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To date, the role of V2 receptors in the regulation of renal function in human CHF remains poorly defined. Therefore, the objective of the present study was to define the role of V2 receptors in renal hemodynamics as well as in the control of regulation of water and sodium excretion. We also compared the renal response of V2-receptor antagonism with the response to acute furosemide. We hypothesized that V2-receptor antagonism would have a diuretic effect comparable to furosemide but would not impair renal hemodynamics or induce plasma electrolyte abnormalities in humans with stable CHF.
| METHODS |
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-blockers, and angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors were to be removed from the study. The study was conducted under the Investigational New Drug Exemption of the US Food and Drug Administration, 21 Code of Federal Regulations, Part 312. The study was performed in compliance with Good Clinical Practice regulations and the ethical principles of the Declaration of Helsinki. The protocol and informed consent form were approved by the institutional review board of each investigational center, and informed consent was obtained from all participants.
Study design and protocol.
The study was designed as a randomized, placebo-controlled crossover study. All subjects received an oral dose that assessed the effects of tolvaptan (Otsuka), furosemide, or placebo. Fifteen days before the start of the study, patients underwent a full physical exam, a 12-lead electrocardiogram, and serum chemistries. They were put on a controlled diet of 2 g of sodium/day, and ACE inhibitors other than captopril were discontinued and replaced with captopril (12.5 or 25 mg, 3 times daily). Bladder ultrasounds were also performed to assess for full emptying of the bladder. Three days before the study, patients were admitted, and captopril, diuretics,
-blockers, and aspirin were discontinued. On study day 1, patients received either a single dose of placebo or 30 mg of tolvaptan and were crossed over to the other medication on day 3. On day 5, all subjects received 80 mg of furosemide. Days 2 and 4 were washout periods. On the evenings of days 1, 2, and 4, all subjects received 600 mg of lithium carbonate at 10 PM. Grapefruit, caffeine, alcohol, and tobacco products were prohibited. Two hours before the administration of the study drug (tolvaptan, placebo, or furosemide), the subjects drank four glasses of distilled water (237 ml/glass), serum chemistries and electrocardiograms were obtained, and a urinary catheter was inserted if necessary. Loading doses, followed by continuous infusions of inulin and PAH were given starting 1.5 h before administration of the study drug. The patients remained in a recumbent position, except for voiding, from 2 h before until 9 h after administration of the study drug.
Mean arterial pressure (MAP), heart rate, and blood samples were obtained at baseline and every hour after dosing for 9 h. Blood for neurohumoral assays was obtained 30 min before and 2.5 h after study drug administration. Urine was voided (or catheter emptied) at baseline and every 30 min after dosing, the volume was determined, and samples were collected for further analyses. Fluid replacement with oral distilled water was given at a 1:1 ratio, based on voided urine volume, starting 1 h after drug dosing and continuing for 8 h.
The glomerular filtration rate (GFR) was calculated by inulin clearance and effective renal plasma flow (ERPF) by PAH clearance. RBF was calculated from ERPF and hematocrit according to the formula RBF = ERPF/(1 hematocrit). Renal vascular resistance (RVR) was estimated as MAP divided by RBF. The lithium clearance technique was employed to estimate the proximal and distal fractional reabsorption of sodium. Proximal fractional reabsorption was calculated by the following formula: [1 (lithium clearance/GFR)] x 100. Distal fractional reabsorption of sodium was calculated by this formula: [(lithium clearance sodium clearance)/lithium clearance] x 100. Electrolytes, inulin, and PAH were determined by well-established methodologies (7). Urine osmolality was measured by freezing-point depression using an automatic microosmometer. Plasma neurohormones were measured by standard radioimmunoassays in blood samples obtained at 0.5 h predose and 2.5 h postdose, with the patient in the supine position before voiding (3a).
Statistical analysis. Tests on the overall mean of repeated-measures data were conducted using a longitudinal analysis model with terms of sequence, subject within sequence, treatment, and period for comparison between tolvaptan and placebo, and a model with terms of subject and treatment for comparisons between tolvaptan and furosemide, as well as placebo and furosemide. In all these models, an autoregression structure is assumed for the repeated observations on a subject within a treatment period. A P value <0.05 was considered statistically significant.
| RESULTS |
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Renal function. Both tolvaptan and furosemide significantly increased urine flow compared with placebo; however, there was no significant difference in urine flow between tolvaptan and furosemide (Fig. 2A). Furosemide significantly increased urinary sodium excretion compared with placebo and tolvaptan, whereas there was no difference between placebo and tolvaptan (Fig. 2B). The same was true for sodium clearance. Similarly, furosemide increased urinary potassium excretion compared with placebo. In contrast, there was no difference between tolvaptan and placebo (Fig. 2C). Again, the same was true for potassium clearance. Urine osmolality was lower with tolvaptan compared with placebo and tended to be lower compared with furosemide. Furosemide also decreased urine osmolality compared with placebo (Fig. 2D). Furosemide significantly decreased RBF compared with placebo and tolvaptan, whereas there was no difference between placebo and tolvaptan (Fig. 2E). Similarly, there was a trend for furosemide to cause a reduction in ERPF (P = 0.053). There were no changes in GFR among the three different groups (Fig. 2F). There were also no changes in RVR.
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Plasma electrolytes. Tolvaptan did not significantly change plasma sodium concentration, whereas furosemide tended to decrease it. However, there were no significant differences among groups (Fig. 3). There were no significant differences in plasma potassium concentration among groups (Fig. 4).
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| DISCUSSION |
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Renal hemodynamics. Acute V2-receptor blockade also significantly increased RBF compared with furosemide, whereas furosemide decreased RBF compared with placebo. However, in this setting no differences could be seen with regard to GFR. The preserved GFR despite decreased RBF with furosemide could occur via vasoconstriction of the efferent arteriole of the glomerulus, leading to an increased filtration fraction.
An emerging concept is that the cardiorenal syndrome may, in part, be a consequence of excessive renal vasoconstriction with a reduction in GFR, which may contribute to the diuretic resistance seen in this syndrome. Excessive use of loop diuretics may contribute to such adverse renal effects. Thus the differential actions of V2-receptor blockade compared with furosemide should be further explored, especially in the acute setting of patients hospitalized for acute decompensated CHF at risk for worsening renal function.
Renal electrolytes. As expected, tolvaptan acted as a pure aquaretic. Conversely, furosemide led to a significant natriuresis and also increased urinary potassium excretion compared with placebo. This aquaretic vs. natriuretic response was further confirmed utilizing the lithium clearance technique to assess sodium handling by the nephron. Here V2 blockade demonstrated no change in either proximal or distal fractional reabsorption of sodium in contrast to a decrease in sodium reabsorption beyond the proximal tubule with furosemide. It is well established that by inhibiting sodium reabsorption in the loop of Henle, furosemide increases sodium delivery to the distal tubule with an associated increase in distal sodium reabsorption. Indeed, loop diuretic use can increase the thiazide-sensitive Na+/Cl cotransporter abundance in the distal tubule and lead to hypertrophy and hyperplasia of cells of the distal collecting duct (1, 22). It will be interesting to see whether the cardiorenal syndrome is associated with these functional and structural changes and whether the use of tolvaptan induces these potentially counterproductive changes.
As Fig. 3 suggests, the serum sodium concentration tended to decrease from baseline with furosemide, whereas this was not seen with tolvaptan treatment. In contrast, no such trend was observed for serum potassium (Fig. 4). It is clinically well known that furosemide is natriuretic and that it also causes potassium loss. Given the nature of this study, it was conducted for only a brief period of time, and therefore no substantial changes in serum electrolytes were expected. Long-term use of V2 blockade with and without potassium-wasting diuretics should be examined carefully as the issue of potassium wasting by loop diuretics is of increasing importance given a recent retrospective analysis of the Studies Of Left Ventricular Dysfunction trial (5). This analysis revealed that CHF patients taking a "potassium-sparing" diuretic had a reduced risk of death from or hospitalization for worsening CHF and a reduced risk of all-cause or cardiovascular death. Thus as a potassium sparing diuretic, chronic use of a V2 antagonist warrants further evaluation as a potential therapy for not only decreasing congestion but also for decreasing mortality. The impact of chronic oral use of tolvaptan on mortality is currently being tested in the Efficacy of Vasopressin Antagonism in Heart Failure: Outcome Study with Tolvaptan (EVEREST) trial (10).
Hyponatremia in CHF patients is associated with increased mortality (16). As discussed by Goldsmith (11) in a recent review, this hyponatremia can arise from 1) a dilutional hypervolemic hyponatremia secondary to water retention promoted by AVP and/or 2) solute losses from standard diuretic therapy. Thus vasopressin antagonists such as tolvaptan may be especially useful in the treatment of CHF patients with hypervolemic hyponatremia.
Neurohormones. In this study, V2 antagonism had no acute, negative effects on the neurohumoral system compared with PLC. The long-term effects of V2-receptor blockade on neurohumoral systems still need to be studied, especially in combination with other cardiovascular medications. This could be of particular relevance to the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system and adrenergic nervous system, given that furosemide, but not tolvaptan, increased plasma renin activity and norepinephrine compared with placebo.
Perspective/outlook.
This study looked exclusively at the effects of the selective V2-receptor antagonist tolvaptan or furosemide on renal function. Subjects with stable CHF in this study had ACE inhibitors, diuretics, and
-blockers discontinued before the study. It would be expected that, e.g., an ACE inhibitor or angiotensin II type 1-receptor (AT1) antagonist could influence renal hemodynamics and neurohumoral activation. Indeed, Chen et al. (3) reported that the AT1-receptor antagonist losartan prevented the furosemide-induced decrease in GFR, reduced aldosterone, and further increased urine flow and urinary sodium excretion. With respect to tolvaptan, the impact of comedication has been partly addressed in the two clinical trials by Gheorghiade and colleagues (8, 9). These investigators found no change in serum creatinine, blood urea nitrogen, or serum electrolytes when tolvaptan was given chronically to these patients, who were on standard therapy and even other diuretics. Other parameters of renal function such as RBF, RVR, GFR, and ERPF were not measured. Although the effects of combined tolvaptan and ACE inhibitor therapy should be addressed further, the data thus far suggest that renal function is not harmed.
Of note, CHF is a syndrome that is characterized not only by fluid retention but also by avid sodium retention. Therefore, tolvaptan as an aquaretic likely will have to be combined with a natriuretic drug. It will be especially interesting to see whether the combination with an aldosterone antagonist might be efficacious, as both available aldosterone antagonists have been shown to decrease mortality in clinical trials (20, 21). Furthermore, thiazides and thiazide-like diuretics, which act on the distal tubule, frequently are not potent enough to control fluid status in more advanced stages of HF, and patients have to be switched to loop diuretics. A combination of a thiazide with tolvaptan may be able to delay this necessity. Future studies to explore these different diuretic strategies and their impact on functional and structural changes in the kidney appear warranted.
Another issue of interest when a selective V2-receptor blocker is given is the impact on the unblocked V1A receptor. A theoretical problem could arise because the circulating AVP, which can no longer bind to the V2 receptor, is available to bind to the V1A receptor, which mediates vasoconstriction. This study was neither intended nor designed to address this issue, but it may indirectly suggest that excess activation of V1A receptors did not occur acutely given that no changes were noted in MAP or RVR when tolvaptan was compared with placebo. Another issue that may need to be addressed in the future is the possibility that excessive V1A-receptor activation causes hypertrophy of cardiac myocytes. An in vitro study of neonatal rat cardiac myocytes suggested that vasopressin could induce hypertrophic growth of myocytes via the V1A receptor (18). The physiology of combined V1A- and V2-receptor antagonism is currently under study (2, 23, 25).
An important limitation of the present study is that it was a single-dose study, and therefore it is not possible to extrapolate these results to long-term administration. Ongoing clinical trials like the EVEREST trial will help us to define the properties of tolvaptan as a chronic therapy (10).
In summary, acute V2-receptor blockade in human CHF with tolvaptan enhanced aquaresis without adversely affecting renal hemodynamics, urinary sodium or potassium excretion, serum electrolytes, or neurohumoral systems. This study was directed only at the renal physiological effects of V2-receptor antagonism in stable patients with mild to moderate heart failure and preserved renal function. More studies are needed to evaluate the effects of V2-receptor blockade on renal function in patients with more severe CHF, in patients with renal insufficiency, and in patients on standard medications, particularly ACE inhibitors.
| GRANTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
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