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Intensification of Blood Pressure Lowering Therapeutics Based on Diuretics Versus Usual Management for Uncontrolled Hypertension IN Patients With Moderate to Severe Chronic Kidney Disease (THINK)

R

Regional University Hospital Center (CHRU)

Status and phase

Enrolling
Phase 3

Conditions

Chronic Kidney Disease(CKD)
Uncontrolled Hypertension

Treatments

Drug: Antihypertensive algorithm
Drug: Standard of care

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05732727
DR210320
2022-501494-39-00 (Other Identifier)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a major public health issue worldwide. Hypertension is the first risk factor in patients with CKD for mortality, cardiovascular disease and end-stage renal disease. It's now well established that lowering blood pressure (BP) reduces renal and cardiovascular complications in this high-risk population. In the general population, in addition to lifestyle interventions, the strategy to initiate and escalate a BP-lowering drug treatment is well described. The drug therapies recommended to achieve optimal BP control in the general population are the following: blockers of the renin-angiotensin system (angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEi) or angiotensin receptor blockers (ARB)), diuretics (thiazides and thiazide-like diuretics), and calcium channel blockers. For patients with CKD, the guidelines advise to start the BP-lowering agent with ACEi or ARB, but then, there is no strong evidence to support the preferential use of any particular agent in controlling BP and the results of clinical trials are discordant. In the NephroTest cohort, a French cohort of patients with CKD stage 1 to 5, among 2015 patients, 1782 had hypertension, only 54% had a diuretic and 44% had uncontrolled hypertension. In this cohort, extracellular fluid (ECF) overload was an independent determinant of hypertension, uncontrolled hypertension and apparent treatment resistant hypertension. In the same cohort, ECF overload was independently associated with end-stage kidney disease and death. Our hypothesis is that patients with CKD and uncontrolled hypertension are fluid overloaded and that the second line of treatment after an ACEi or an ARB should be a diuretic. We hypothesize that a specific algorithm to lower BP in patients with moderate to severe CKD based on diuretics will be more effective in term of cardiovascular event, mortality and evolution to end-stage kidney disease as compared to standard of care.

Enrollment

720 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 80 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Male or female >=18 years with a clinical frailty score ≤5 for patient aged over 80
  • Advanced or moderate chronic kidney disease (eGFR 15 to 44.9 mL/min/1.73m² using CKD-EPI formula)
  • Arterial hypertension treated with at least one blood pressure lowering drug therapy among blockers of the renin-angiotensin system (ACEi or ARB), at the maximal posology tolerated by the patients stable since at least one month. Other blood pressure lowering drug therapies are tolerated in combination with or in the event of intolerance to ACE inhibitors or ARBs.
  • Uncontrolled office BP
  • Uncontrolled office BP (>140 and/or 90 mmHg) confirmed by home blood pressure monitoring (>135 and/or 85 mmHg) or Day-time Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring
  • Participant covered by or entitled to social security
  • Written informed consent obtained from the participant

Exclusion criteria

  • Patient following any measures of legal presentation
  • Pregnant or breastfeeding woman
  • woman of childbearing without a highly effective contraceptive measure (combined or progestogen-only hormonal contraception associated with inhibition of ovulation, intrauterine device or intrauterine hormone-releasing system)
  • Clinical signs of hypovolemia
  • Symptomatic orthostatic hypotension
  • Hyponatremia (<130 mmol/L)
  • Dyskalemia (<3,5 mmol/L or >5,5 mmol/L)
  • Major adverse cardiovascular event during the last three months: myocardial infarction, heart failure hospitalization, stroke
  • Current medical history of cancer requiring chemotherapy
  • Solid organ transplantation
  • Two or more diuretic agents (loop diuretic, thiazides and thiazide-like diuretics)
  • Mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists
  • Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease treated with Tolvaptan
  • Contraindication to diuretics involved in the algorithm
  • Severe heart failure (NYHA III_IV)
  • Cirrhosis Child B-C

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

720 participants in 2 patient groups

Experimental group
Experimental group
Description:
Antihypertensive algorithm based on diuretics agents : the clinicians will adjust the drug therapy according to the antihypertensive algorithm based on diuretics agents.
Treatment:
Drug: Antihypertensive algorithm
Control group
Active Comparator group
Description:
Standard of care : the clinicians will adapt the antihypertensive strategy according to his own standard of care which can be pharmacological or non-pharmacological therapies.
Treatment:
Drug: Standard of care

Trial contacts and locations

40

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Central trial contact

Bénédicte Sautenet, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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