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Rapamycin for treatment of type I autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (RAPYD-study): a randomized, controlled study
Authors:Giovanni Stallone  Barbara Infante  Giuseppe Grandaliano  Christos Bristogiannis  Luca Macarini  Daniela Mezzopane  Francesca Bruno  Eustacchio Montemurno  Annalisa Schirinzi  Massimo Sabbatini  Antonio Pisani  Tiziana Tataranni  Francesco Paolo Schena  Loreto Gesualdo
Affiliation:Correspondence and offprint requests to: Giovanni Stallone; E-mail: g.stallone@unifg.it; stallonegio63@gmail.com.
Abstract:Background Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is the most common form of cystic kidney disease. An inappropriate stimulation of mammalian target of rapamycin may represent the converging point in the molecular pathways leading to renal cyst growth. Methods The primary objectives of this prospective, open-label, randomized clinical trial were to assess whether rapamycin may reduce the progressive increase in single cyst and total kidney volume in type I ADPKD and the decline in renal function and to identify the optimal rapamycin dose. Fifty-five patients with type I ADPKD were enrolled and randomized to receive ramipril (Group A), ramipril + high-dose rapamycin (Group B, trough level 6-8 ng/mL) and ramipril + low-dose rapamycin (Group C, trough levels 2-4 ng/mL). Rapamycin efficacy was monitored measuring p70 phosphorylation in peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Results Both rapamycin doses significantly reduced p70 phosphorylation. Nevertheless, total kidney volume increased in all groups after 24 months, although only in Groups A and B, was the final volume significantly higher compared with the baseline. Single cyst final volume was not significantly different in the three groups, although it was increased in Group A compared with the baseline, whereas in Groups B and C, it was significantly reduced. We did not observe any difference in renal function at 24 months among the three study groups. Group A presented a significant worsening of renal function that remained stable in both Groups B and C. Conclusions Our study would suggest that rapamycin does not influence the progression of type I ADPKD, although the higher drug dose tested prevented both the increase in kidney volume and the worsening of renal function (RAPYD-study, EUDRACT No. 2007-006557-25).
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