anaritide and Kidney-Tubular-Necrosis--Acute

anaritide has been researched along with Kidney-Tubular-Necrosis--Acute* in 5 studies

Trials

4 trial(s) available for anaritide and Kidney-Tubular-Necrosis--Acute

ArticleYear
Atrial natriuretic factor in oliguric acute renal failure. Anaritide Acute Renal Failure Study Group.
    American journal of kidney diseases : the official journal of the National Kidney Foundation, 2000, Volume: 36, Issue:4

    Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP), an endogenous hormone synthesized by the cardiac atria, has been shown to improve renal function in multiple animal models of acute renal failure. In a recent multicenter clinical trial of 504 patients with acute tubular necrosis (oliguric and nonoliguric), ANP decreased the need for dialysis only in the oliguric patients. In the present study, 222 patients with oliguric acute renal failure were enrolled into a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial designed to assess prospectively the safety and efficacy of ANP compared with placebo. Subjects were randomized to treatment with a 24-hour infusion of ANP (anaritide, 0.2 microgram/kg/min; synthetic form of human ANP) or placebo. Dialysis and mortality status were followed up for 60 days. The primary efficacy end point was dialysis-free survival through day 21. Dialysis-free survival rates were 21% in the ANP group and 15% in the placebo group (P = 0.22). By day 14 of the study, 64% and 77% of the ANP and placebo groups had undergone dialysis, respectively (P = 0.054), and 9 additional patients (7 patients, ANP group; 2 patients, placebo group) needed dialysis but did not receive it. Although a trend was present, there was no statistically significant beneficial effect of ANP in dialysis-free survival or reduction in dialysis in these subjects with oliguric acute renal failure. Mortality rates through day 60 were 60% versus 56% in the ANP and placebo groups, respectively (P = 0.541). One hundred two of 108 (95%) versus 63 of 114 (55%) patients in the ANP and placebo groups had systolic blood pressures less than 90 mm Hg during the study-drug infusion (P < 0.001). The maximal absolute decrease in systolic blood pressure was significantly greater in the anaritide group than placebo group (33.6 versus 23.9 mm Hg; P < 0.001). This well-characterized population with oliguric acute renal failure had an overall high morbidity and mortality.

    Topics: Adult; Aged; Atrial Natriuretic Factor; Blood Pressure; Data Interpretation, Statistical; Diuretics; Double-Blind Method; Female; Heart Rate; Humans; Kidney Tubular Necrosis, Acute; Male; Middle Aged; Oliguria; Peptide Fragments; Placebos; Prospective Studies; Renal Dialysis; Risk Factors; Survival Rate; Treatment Outcome

2000
Acute tubular necrosis in patients with diabetes mellitus.
    American journal of kidney diseases : the official journal of the National Kidney Foundation, 1999, Volume: 34, Issue:6

    We compared the clinical outcomes of patients with (n = 71) and without (n = 185) diabetes mellitus enrolled into the placebo arm of a large, multicenter clinical trial of patients with acute tubular necrosis (ATN). Compared with the nondiabetic patients, diabetic patients were older (65.5 +/- 12.9 versus 60.7 +/- 18.0 years, P < 0. 05), had higher usual serum creatinine concentration (1.7 +/- 0.6 versus 1.4 +/- 0.5 mg/dL, P < 0.001), and had a higher prevalence of underlying hypertension, coronary artery disease, and congestive heart failure (all P < 0.007). By day 21 after enrollment, neither mortality nor dialysis-free survival was different between the groups. Length of stay for surviving patients, in both the intensive care unit and the hospital, were significantly shorter for the diabetics. Among acute comorbidities predicting mortality or the need for dialysis, sepsis was more prevalent among the nondiabetic patients (18% versus 35%, diabetics versus nondiabetics, P < 0.05). In conclusion, clinical outcomes for diabetic patients with ATN were no worse than for nondiabetic patients, despite their older age and worse underlying renal function. Patients with diabetes mellitus had more chronic cardiovascular disease but were less acutely ill. We speculate that cardiovascular disease is a risk factor for ATN in patients with diabetes mellitus. These results fail to implicate the increasing prevalence of diabetes mellitus in the persistently poor prognosis of patients with ATN.

    Topics: Aged; Atrial Natriuretic Factor; Diabetes Complications; Diabetes Mellitus; Diuretics; Humans; Kidney Tubular Necrosis, Acute; Middle Aged; Peptide Fragments; Prognosis; Renal Dialysis; Risk Factors; Survival Rate

1999
Anaritide in acute tubular necrosis. Auriculin Anaritide Acute Renal Failure Study Group.
    The New England journal of medicine, 1997, Mar-20, Volume: 336, Issue:12

    Atrial natriuretic peptide, a hormone synthesized by the cardiac atria, increases the glomerular filtration rate by dilating afferent arterioles while constricting efferent arterioles. It has been shown to improve glomerular filtration, urinary output, and renal histopathology in laboratory animals with acute renal dysfunction. Anaritide is a 25-amino-acid synthetic form of atrial natriuretic peptide.. We conducted a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial of anaritide in 504 critically ill patients with acute tubular necrosis. The patients received a 24-hour intravenous infusion of either anaritide (0.2 microgram per kilogram of body weight per minute) or placebo. The primary end point was dialysis-free survival for 21 days after treatment. Other end points included the need for dialysis, changes in the serum creatinine concentration, and mortality.. The rate of dialysis-free survival was 47 percent in the placebo group and 43 percent in the anaritide group (P = 0.35). In the prospectively defined subgroup of 120 patients with oliguria (urinary output, < 400 ml per day), dialysis-free survival was 8 percent in the placebo group (5 of 60 patients) and 27 percent in the anaritide group (16 of 60 patients, P = 0.008). Anaritide-treated patients with oliguria who no longer had oliguria after treatment benefited the most. Conversely, among the 378 patients without oliguria, dialysis-free survival was 59 percent in the placebo group (116 of 195 patients) and 48 percent in the anaritide group (88 of 183 patients, P = 0.03).. The administration of anaritide did not improve the overall rate of dialysis-free survival in critically ill patients with acute tubular necrosis. However, anaritide may improve dialysis-free survival in patients with oliguria and may worsen it in patients without oliguria who have acute tubular necrosis.

    Topics: Atrial Natriuretic Factor; Diuretics; Double-Blind Method; Female; Humans; Infusions, Intravenous; Kidney Tubular Necrosis, Acute; Male; Middle Aged; Oliguria; Peptide Fragments; Prospective Studies; Renal Dialysis; Survival Analysis; Treatment Outcome

1997
Cause of acute tubular necrosis affects its prognosis. The Auriculin Anaritide Acute Renal Failure Study Group.
    Archives of internal medicine, 1997, Sep-08, Volume: 157, Issue:16

    Acute tubular necrosis (ATN) is the most common type of acute renal failure in hospitalized patients and is associated with a high morbidity and mortality. The cause of ATN can be divided into nephrotoxic, ischemic, or mixed.. To test the hypothesis that the cause of ATN affects its clinical outcome.. The study compares clinical outcomes of patients enrolled in the placebo arm of a multicenter, randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trial of anaritide (Auriculin, synthetic atrial natriuretic peptide, Scios, Mountain View, Calif) in patients with well-defined ATN. Patients were divided prospectively into groups according to the cause of ATN: pure nephrotoxic, pure ischemic, or mixed nephrotoxic and ischemic. Outcomes of interest were dialysis-free survival and all-cause mortality on day 14 and day 21. The causal groups were compared with respect to the prevalence of several comorbidities suspected of affecting the clinical outcomes.. Mortality was 10% in the nephrotoxic group and 30% in the ischemic group on day 21. Dialysis-free survival was 66% in the nephrotoxic group and 41% in the ischemic group on day 21. Outcomes in the mixed and ischemic groups were similar. Compared with the nephrotoxic group, there was a significantly higher prevalence of cardiogenic shock, hypotension, sepsis, and respiratory failure and a tendency toward a higher prevalence of acute hepatic dysfunction in the ischemic group. Diabetes mellitus was more prevalent in the nephrotoxic group. Among patients with ischemic ATN, dialysis-free survival improved significantly and mortality tended to decline with advancing age.. Among patients with ATN, those in whom renal ischemia was causative had significantly higher mortality and lower dialysis-free survival than those whose ATN was purely nephrotoxic in origin. This difference in clinical outcomes was associated with a higher prevalence of serious commorbidities in the ischemic ATN group. Advancing age was associated with improved dialysis-free survival and a tendency toward reduced mortality in patients with ischemic ATN.

    Topics: Adult; Aged; Atrial Natriuretic Factor; Diuretics; Double-Blind Method; Female; Humans; Ischemia; Kidney Tubular Necrosis, Acute; Male; Middle Aged; Natriuresis; Peptide Fragments; Prognosis; Prospective Studies; Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic; Renal Dialysis; Risk Factors; Survival Analysis

1997

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for anaritide and Kidney-Tubular-Necrosis--Acute

ArticleYear
Acute renal failure--the promise of new therapies.
    The New England journal of medicine, 1997, Mar-20, Volume: 336, Issue:12

    Topics: Atrial Natriuretic Factor; Diuretics; Humans; Integrins; Kidney Tubular Necrosis, Acute; Peptide Fragments

1997