Friday, December 12, 2014

Effects of Intensive Low-Salt Diet Education on Albuminuria: CJASN e-Journal Club

This month’s CJASN e-journal club was hosted at the Department of Nephrology at the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh. It discussed a trial designed to investigate the efficacy of an intensive low salt diet intervention (weekly 30 minutes phone feedback by a dietary consultant) on albuminuria in non-diabetic hypertensive patients already on an ARB. This study is an open-label, case-control, randomized clinical trial based in South Korea. 

It is important to note that selected patients were a relatively healthy, homogenous population with good blood pressure control and an already low urinary sodium excretion. Very few were active smokers and many took regular exercise. All RAAS antagonists and diuretic agents were stopped for an 8 week run in and blood pressure was controlled with alternative agents. At week 0, Olmesartan was then commenced, and at 8 weeks, subjects were randomised to control or intensive education groups. 
The primary endpoint was the decrement in albuminuria by week 16 and was reached in the intensive salt reduction group. They demonstrated a significant reduction in albuminuria (278 mg/d to 178 mg/d) compared to the conventional therapy group (258 mg/d to 231 mg/d). There was a greater reduction in urinary sodium excretion in the intensive education group than the conventional group, but no change in blood pressure or renal function. In subgroup analyses, the authors examined those that received a reduction of > 25% of their dietary salt and those who did not, irrespective of treatment group. Notably, only 60% of those who achieved this reduction came from the intensive group. 

Overall this is an interesting, well-performed study which successfully demonstrates that lower salt excretion correlates with lower albuminuria. This occurred despite no effect on BP in a cohort with already excellent BP control. It may be better to interpret this as a “proof of concept” that salt restriction in humans could influence albuminuria. For clinical practice however, there are issues around the generalizability of these findings to everyday patients, given this was a highly selected, compliant group of patients. Also, as we know in the nephrology community from previous trials, an improvement in a relatively soft endpoint like albuminuria will not necessarily translate into improvements in renal/cardiovascular events or mortality. 

Check out the full text of the paper, our complete post and discussion over at the CJASN eJC website.

Authored by Eoin O’Sullivan & Paul Phelan

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Hello,
I cannot log into the website of eJournal Club anymore. What is an alternative way to log in? Please help.