Bariatric Surgery for Obese Patients With Chronic Renal Insufficiency
NCT02612831 · Status: TERMINATED · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 72
Last updated 2024-02-05
Summary
The creatinine clearance will be measured using two consecutive 24 hour urine collections, with the objective of minimizing errors due to poor quality urine collection.
The GFR will be measured by a reference method, because its estimation from blood creatinine levels (eGFR) by the MDRD study formula may be confounded by variations in muscle mass, and therefore creatinine production, following bariatric surgery. The method will remain the same in each center, and therefore consistent for any given patient, throughout the duration of the study. The GFR measurements will be performed after stopping any medication blocking the RAAS, and reducing diuretics for one week, with the introduction or increase of alpha-blockers or centrally-acting hypotensive agents. If it is impossible to stop RAAS-blockade (heart failure), the dose will at least be reduced for one week. This precaution is required to minimize the bias of functional renal insufficiency because the state of extracellular hydration is difficult to assess in obese subjects. Subsequent measurements of GFR will be performed in the same way.
The choice of the tracer to measure GFR may vary according to study center. 51Cr-EDTA, 99Tc-DTPA, iohexol or inulin may all be utilized. Because the assessment of edema is hazardous in extremely obese patients and because kidney disease favors edema formation, the simplified single injection method and the determination of plasma clearance measurement of the tracer is not reliable . Only the constant infusion method will be used to measure GFR. Briefly, GFR will be determined by calculating the glomerular clearance (Cl) from plasma concentrations (P) and renal excretions per unit of time (UxV) during infusion at a constant plasma level of the tracer (Cl=UxV/P). The result will be given as mean value of several consecutive clearances. Because correct urine collection is key for the procedure, seven collection periods (instead of 5 usually) will be performed for the calculation of the mean clearance. Bladder catheterization will be used only when it can be anticipated that the patient will not void satisfactorily. In the last 30 consecutive patients with mGFR below 60 ml/min/1,73m2, this occurred twice and the subjects were 70 and 79 years old. Therefore, this might occur exceptionably in the study. Raw data from each center will be sent to the coordination center (Nice) to examine and validate the calculation of mean clearance values. To that aim, extreme and non-representative clearances will be excluded. At least 3 of the 7 periods will be taken into account to calculate the mean values. For instance, in the last 30 consecutive patients with mGFR below 60 ml/min/1,73m2, investigators considered on average 4.7 periods and obtained a mean non-indexed GFR value of 40,7 ± 2,5 ml/min.
Primary assessment will be performed at one year, as a previous study has already suggested a significant benefit within this period \[66\], and because surgery can't be delayed further in these patients strongly expecting the intervention, but follow-up will be extended to three years or until the end of the study, in order to document whether the initial benefits of surgical intervention are maintained.
* A reduction in the absolute value of measured GFR (mGFR) following bariatric surgery is expected in the first six months after surgery (M0 - M6). However, the weight loss may allow an increased in mGFR indexed to body surface area up until M6, and above all towards M12.
* the investigators expect a subsequent stabilization of mGFR between M12 and M36 in the bariatric surgery group, and will seek to measure the anticipated reduction in mGFR in the control group who remain in a state of glomerular hyperfiltration.
All relevant cardiovascular, metabolic and nutritional parameters necessary to study the risk/benefit ratio of the intervention will be analyzed.
* Primary: bariatric surgery slows the progression of chronic kidney disease in the obese.
* Secondary: bariatric surgery improves survival, cardiovascular prognosis, metabolic, nutritional and inflammatory parameters, quality of life, and access to transplantation in the sub-group of patients whose GFR \< 20ml/min/1.73m2 at inclusion, and there could be a chance loss for the patients in delaying surgery by one year.
Conditions
Interventions
- PROCEDURE
-
Early bariatric surgery
- PROCEDURE
-
Delayed bariatric surgery
Sponsors & Collaborators
-
Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Nice
lead OTHER
Study Design
- Allocation
- RANDOMIZED
- Purpose
- PREVENTION
- Masking
- NONE
- Model
- PARALLEL
Eligibility
- Min Age
- 18 Years
- Max Age
- 75 Years
- Sex
- ALL
- Healthy Volunteers
- No
Timeline & Regulatory
- Start
- 2016-12-31
- Primary Completion
- 2022-12-31
- Completion
- 2022-12-06
Countries
- France
Study Locations
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