Proteomic prediction and Renin angiotensin aldosterone system Inhibition prevention Of early diabetic nephRopathy in TYpe 2 diabetic patients with normoalbuminuria (PRIORITY): essential study design and rationale of a randomised clinical multicentre trial

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Proteomic prediction and Renin angiotensin aldosterone system Inhibition prevention Of early diabetic nephRopathy in TYpe 2 diabetic patients with normoalbuminuria (PRIORITY) : essential study design and rationale of a randomised clinical multicentre trial. / Lindhardt, Morten; Persson, Frederik; Currie, Gemma; Pontillo, Claudia; Beige, Joachim; Delles, Christian; von der Leyen, Heiko; Mischak, Harald; Navis, Gerjan; Noutsou, Marina; Ortiz, Alberto; Ruggenenti, Piero Luigi; Rychlik, Ivan; Spasovski, Goce; Rossing, Peter.

In: B M J Open, Vol. 6, No. 3, e010310, 2016.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Lindhardt, M, Persson, F, Currie, G, Pontillo, C, Beige, J, Delles, C, von der Leyen, H, Mischak, H, Navis, G, Noutsou, M, Ortiz, A, Ruggenenti, PL, Rychlik, I, Spasovski, G & Rossing, P 2016, 'Proteomic prediction and Renin angiotensin aldosterone system Inhibition prevention Of early diabetic nephRopathy in TYpe 2 diabetic patients with normoalbuminuria (PRIORITY): essential study design and rationale of a randomised clinical multicentre trial', B M J Open, vol. 6, no. 3, e010310. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2015-010310

APA

Lindhardt, M., Persson, F., Currie, G., Pontillo, C., Beige, J., Delles, C., von der Leyen, H., Mischak, H., Navis, G., Noutsou, M., Ortiz, A., Ruggenenti, P. L., Rychlik, I., Spasovski, G., & Rossing, P. (2016). Proteomic prediction and Renin angiotensin aldosterone system Inhibition prevention Of early diabetic nephRopathy in TYpe 2 diabetic patients with normoalbuminuria (PRIORITY): essential study design and rationale of a randomised clinical multicentre trial. B M J Open, 6(3), [e010310]. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2015-010310

Vancouver

Lindhardt M, Persson F, Currie G, Pontillo C, Beige J, Delles C et al. Proteomic prediction and Renin angiotensin aldosterone system Inhibition prevention Of early diabetic nephRopathy in TYpe 2 diabetic patients with normoalbuminuria (PRIORITY): essential study design and rationale of a randomised clinical multicentre trial. B M J Open. 2016;6(3). e010310. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2015-010310

Author

Lindhardt, Morten ; Persson, Frederik ; Currie, Gemma ; Pontillo, Claudia ; Beige, Joachim ; Delles, Christian ; von der Leyen, Heiko ; Mischak, Harald ; Navis, Gerjan ; Noutsou, Marina ; Ortiz, Alberto ; Ruggenenti, Piero Luigi ; Rychlik, Ivan ; Spasovski, Goce ; Rossing, Peter. / Proteomic prediction and Renin angiotensin aldosterone system Inhibition prevention Of early diabetic nephRopathy in TYpe 2 diabetic patients with normoalbuminuria (PRIORITY) : essential study design and rationale of a randomised clinical multicentre trial. In: B M J Open. 2016 ; Vol. 6, No. 3.

Bibtex

@article{3e5c3bcf82d346bead20d9f306fd4fad,
title = "Proteomic prediction and Renin angiotensin aldosterone system Inhibition prevention Of early diabetic nephRopathy in TYpe 2 diabetic patients with normoalbuminuria (PRIORITY): essential study design and rationale of a randomised clinical multicentre trial",
abstract = "INTRODUCTION: Diabetes mellitus affects 9% of the European population and accounts for 15% of healthcare expenditure, in particular, due to excess costs related to complications. Clinical trials aiming for earlier prevention of diabetic nephropathy by renin angiotensin system blocking treatment in normoalbumuric patients have given mixed results. This might reflect that the large fraction of normoalbuminuric patients are not at risk of progression, thereby reducing power in previous studies. A specific risk classifier based on urinary proteomics (chronic kidney disease (CKD)273) has been shown to identify normoalbuminuric diabetic patients who later progressed to overt kidney disease, and may hold the potential for selection of high-risk patients for early intervention. Combining the ability of CKD273 to identify patients at highest risk of progression with prescription of preventive aldosterone blockade only to this high-risk population will increase power. We aim to confirm performance of CKD273 in a prospective multicentre clinical trial and test the ability of spironolactone to delay progression of early diabetic nephropathy.METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Investigator-initiated, prospective multicentre clinical trial, with randomised double-masked placebo-controlled intervention and a prospective observational study. We aim to include 3280 type 2 diabetic participants with normoalbuminuria. The CKD273 classifier will be assessed in all participants. Participants with high-risk pattern are randomised to treatment with spironolactone 25 mg once daily, or placebo, whereas, those with low-risk pattern will be observed without intervention other than standard of care. Treatment or observational period is 3 years.The primary endpoint is development of confirmed microalbuminuria in 2 of 3 first morning voids urine samples.ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The study will be conducted under International Conference on Harmonisation - Good clinical practice (ICH-GCP) requirements, ethical principles of Declaration of Helsinki and national laws. This first new biomarker-directed intervention trial aiming at primary prevention of diabetic nephropathy may pave the way for personalised medicine approaches in treatment of diabetes complications.TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT02040441; Pre-results.",
author = "Morten Lindhardt and Frederik Persson and Gemma Currie and Claudia Pontillo and Joachim Beige and Christian Delles and {von der Leyen}, Heiko and Harald Mischak and Gerjan Navis and Marina Noutsou and Alberto Ortiz and Ruggenenti, {Piero Luigi} and Ivan Rychlik and Goce Spasovski and Peter Rossing",
note = "Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1136/bmjopen-2015-010310",
language = "English",
volume = "6",
journal = "BMJ Open",
issn = "2044-6055",
publisher = "BMJ Publishing Group",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Proteomic prediction and Renin angiotensin aldosterone system Inhibition prevention Of early diabetic nephRopathy in TYpe 2 diabetic patients with normoalbuminuria (PRIORITY)

T2 - essential study design and rationale of a randomised clinical multicentre trial

AU - Lindhardt, Morten

AU - Persson, Frederik

AU - Currie, Gemma

AU - Pontillo, Claudia

AU - Beige, Joachim

AU - Delles, Christian

AU - von der Leyen, Heiko

AU - Mischak, Harald

AU - Navis, Gerjan

AU - Noutsou, Marina

AU - Ortiz, Alberto

AU - Ruggenenti, Piero Luigi

AU - Rychlik, Ivan

AU - Spasovski, Goce

AU - Rossing, Peter

N1 - Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - INTRODUCTION: Diabetes mellitus affects 9% of the European population and accounts for 15% of healthcare expenditure, in particular, due to excess costs related to complications. Clinical trials aiming for earlier prevention of diabetic nephropathy by renin angiotensin system blocking treatment in normoalbumuric patients have given mixed results. This might reflect that the large fraction of normoalbuminuric patients are not at risk of progression, thereby reducing power in previous studies. A specific risk classifier based on urinary proteomics (chronic kidney disease (CKD)273) has been shown to identify normoalbuminuric diabetic patients who later progressed to overt kidney disease, and may hold the potential for selection of high-risk patients for early intervention. Combining the ability of CKD273 to identify patients at highest risk of progression with prescription of preventive aldosterone blockade only to this high-risk population will increase power. We aim to confirm performance of CKD273 in a prospective multicentre clinical trial and test the ability of spironolactone to delay progression of early diabetic nephropathy.METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Investigator-initiated, prospective multicentre clinical trial, with randomised double-masked placebo-controlled intervention and a prospective observational study. We aim to include 3280 type 2 diabetic participants with normoalbuminuria. The CKD273 classifier will be assessed in all participants. Participants with high-risk pattern are randomised to treatment with spironolactone 25 mg once daily, or placebo, whereas, those with low-risk pattern will be observed without intervention other than standard of care. Treatment or observational period is 3 years.The primary endpoint is development of confirmed microalbuminuria in 2 of 3 first morning voids urine samples.ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The study will be conducted under International Conference on Harmonisation - Good clinical practice (ICH-GCP) requirements, ethical principles of Declaration of Helsinki and national laws. This first new biomarker-directed intervention trial aiming at primary prevention of diabetic nephropathy may pave the way for personalised medicine approaches in treatment of diabetes complications.TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT02040441; Pre-results.

AB - INTRODUCTION: Diabetes mellitus affects 9% of the European population and accounts for 15% of healthcare expenditure, in particular, due to excess costs related to complications. Clinical trials aiming for earlier prevention of diabetic nephropathy by renin angiotensin system blocking treatment in normoalbumuric patients have given mixed results. This might reflect that the large fraction of normoalbuminuric patients are not at risk of progression, thereby reducing power in previous studies. A specific risk classifier based on urinary proteomics (chronic kidney disease (CKD)273) has been shown to identify normoalbuminuric diabetic patients who later progressed to overt kidney disease, and may hold the potential for selection of high-risk patients for early intervention. Combining the ability of CKD273 to identify patients at highest risk of progression with prescription of preventive aldosterone blockade only to this high-risk population will increase power. We aim to confirm performance of CKD273 in a prospective multicentre clinical trial and test the ability of spironolactone to delay progression of early diabetic nephropathy.METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Investigator-initiated, prospective multicentre clinical trial, with randomised double-masked placebo-controlled intervention and a prospective observational study. We aim to include 3280 type 2 diabetic participants with normoalbuminuria. The CKD273 classifier will be assessed in all participants. Participants with high-risk pattern are randomised to treatment with spironolactone 25 mg once daily, or placebo, whereas, those with low-risk pattern will be observed without intervention other than standard of care. Treatment or observational period is 3 years.The primary endpoint is development of confirmed microalbuminuria in 2 of 3 first morning voids urine samples.ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The study will be conducted under International Conference on Harmonisation - Good clinical practice (ICH-GCP) requirements, ethical principles of Declaration of Helsinki and national laws. This first new biomarker-directed intervention trial aiming at primary prevention of diabetic nephropathy may pave the way for personalised medicine approaches in treatment of diabetes complications.TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT02040441; Pre-results.

U2 - 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-010310

DO - 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-010310

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 26936907

VL - 6

JO - BMJ Open

JF - BMJ Open

SN - 2044-6055

IS - 3

M1 - e010310

ER -

ID: 159743901