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DRUGS AND THE KIDNEY

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Title: DRUGS AND THE KIDNEY


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DRUGS AND THE KIDNEY
  • BY
  • Hany Elbarbary

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Who should be interested in this topic ?
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Every body should bewhy?
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Because of 2 reasonsthe first one is that we
are all prescribing drugs all the time
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The second one is moreimportant
  • Which is that every body usually has 2 kidneys

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  • Many drugs can injure the kidneys, but they cause
    renal injury via only a few common mechanisms.
  • Many patients who develop renal injury after drug
    exposure have
  • identifiable risk factors that could be
    modified. ???

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  • Renal elimination of drugs
  • Drugs may be eliminated via the kidneys by two
    main mechanisms
  • Glomerular filtration a passive process such
    drugs will be water-soluble.
  • Active tubular secretion drugs act as substrates
    for secretory processes that are designed to
    eliminate endogenous molecules. ???

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  • When renal disease leads to a reduction in
    nephron, the kidneys ability to eliminate drugs
    declines in proportion to the decline in
    glomerular filtration rate. As renal failure
    progresses, drugs filtered or secreted by the
    kidney can accumulate , potentially resulting in
    toxicity.

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  • Renal injury can present as acute renal failure,
    Nephrotic syndrome, renal tubular dysfunction, or
    chronic renal failure

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  • Drug nephrotoxicity
  • Drugs can lead to renal damage in a number of
    different ways
  • Alteration of renal blood flow
  • NSAIDsalteration in prostaglandin metabolism can
    lead to critical reduction in glumerular
    perfusion, interstitial nephritis can also result
    from NSAIDs
  • ACE inhibitors and ARBs ARF or renal impairment
    ????

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  • Occurring in patients who are critically
    dependant upon RAA system.
  • Cyclosporine A
  • 2. Direct tubular toxicity
  • Aminoglycosides disturbance of renal function is
    seen in up to a third of patients receiving
    aminoglycosides.

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  • Cisplatin selectively toxic to proximal tubules
    by inhibiting nuclear DNA synthesis
  • Amphotercine B
  • 3.glumerulonephritis
  • Gold
  • Is believed to induce an immune complex
    GN
  • Penicillamine
  • It is dose related

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  • 4. Other nephrotoxic effects of drugs
  • Interstitial nephritis
  • Retropertoneal fibrosis
  • Drug induced SLE
  • Nephrogenic DI

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  • Drugs which accumulate and cause toxicity in
    patients with sever renal failure include
  • 1.Pencillins and cephalosporins high dose.
  • 2.digoxin
  • 3. Erythromycin
  • Nephrotoxic drugs may lead to an acute
    deterioration of renal function in patients with
    CRF and they can severely excerbates renal damage
    in ARF.

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  • Absorption of some drugs may be altered in uremia
    as a consequence of
  • edema of the gastrointestinal tract coupled with
    uremic nausea ,vomiting or gastroparesis.
    Alteration in the distribution of drugs vary
    depending on the agents . Acidic drugs will have
    a higher free fraction in the plasma of uremic
    patients as a consequence of decrease protein
    binding.

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How nephrotoxic are the NSAIDs ?
  • PG have relatively little effect on the normal
    kidney in the euvolemic person
  • However in renal insufficiency or hypovolemic
    states PG are important in maintaining adequate
    glomerular flow and pressure by VD of renal
    arteries , ? Na loss and ? rennin release

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nephrotoxic effects of NSAIDs
  • ? Na retention and blood volume (CHF)
  • Papillary necrosis
  • ? K
  • Acute allergic interstitial nephritis ass with
    fenoprofen
  • ATN
  • Interstitial nephritis with aspirin ,caffeine ???

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Diabetic drugs and the kidney
  • Glucophage
  • Insulin
  • TZDs
  • Acarboses
  • DPP-IV Inhibitors
  • sulphonylureas

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Insulin in renal patients
  • Insulin resistance
  • Insulin catabolism

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Liver diseases and the kidney
  • Which organ you should be more careful about?
  • HRS
  • Electrolyte disturbance
  • Renal impairment in HCV

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Heart failure and the kidney
  • Diuretics
  • digitalis
  • B-blocker in HD patients

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  • Radio-contrast nephropathy
  • Mild renal dysfunction may complicate up to 10
    of angiographic procedures and IVUs.
    Radio-contrast nephropathy is manifest by non
    oliguric ARF, typically occurring 1-5 days after
    the procedure. Intra- renal vasoconstriction,
    mediated largely by endothelin, and tubular cell
    toxicity (with ATN) are important in the
    pathogenesis . The ARF is fully reversible.

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  • Risk factors for radio- contrast nephropathy
  • High contrast load
  • Hypovolaemia
  • Myeloma , Hyperuricaemia
  • Age
  • High iodine content of contrast
  • Diabetes
  • Hypercalcaemia
  • Pre-existing CRF

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Management of drug nephrotoxicity
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  • A careful history and physical examination are
    always the first steps in clinical evaluation of
    patients with renal disease. Particularly
    important for this purpose is the history of
    previous drug allergy or toxicity and the use of
    concurrent medications.

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  • Physical assessment should include
  • An estimate of the extracellular fluid volume.
  • Oh ??
  • Edema or ascites increases the distribution
    volume of many drugs, while dehydration contracts
    this volume. Evidence of impaired function of
    other excretory organs should be sought. Stigmata
    of liver disease are clue that the drug dose may
    need to be altered.

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  • II. Measurement of renal function
  • the rate of elimination of drugs excreted by the
    kidneys is proportional to the glomerular
    filtration rate. The serum creatinine ,
    creatinine clearance is needed to determine renal
    function before prescribing many drugs . The
    Cockcroft and Gault equation is useful for this
    purpose, as shown in the following formula
  • CrCl (ml/min) (140-age)x (BW in kg)(x0.85if
    female)
  • 72x Scr(mg/dl)

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  • The Scr reflects muscle mass as well as
    glomerular filtration rate. Scr measurement
    within the normal range are frequently used to
    establish normal renal function. This may cause
    serious over- dose and resultant toxic drugs
    accumulation in elderly or debilitated patients
    with decreased muscle mass.

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Do we have another option?
  • Cystatin C is a good indicator of renal function
    specially in children and elderly patients
  • Estimated GFR is the best way to assess
    progression of kidney disease in chronic renal
    patients

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GENERAL PRINCIPLES
  • Be vigilant. Adverse renal effects of drugs are
  • largely silent in the early stages
  • Identify patients at risk .
  • Take precautions .

Manage the renal failure
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  • Pretreatment hydration can reduce the nephrotoxic
    potential of many drugs.
  • So ,it is very simple steps by which you can
    avoid getting yourself and your patient in a big
    problem.

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When in doubt about the cause of renal failure,
hold all potentially offending drugs
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  • How should antibiotic doses be adjusted in
    patients with renal failure?
  • Several antibiotics need dosage modification in
    the presence of renal failure, most
    cephalosporins, many penicillin's and vancomycin.
    The adjustments can be made by
  • maintaining the usual dose and varying the dosing
    interval,
  • maintaining the dosing interval and varying the
    dose,
  • or a combination of the two.

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  • The objective is to obtain a therapeutic drug
    concentration- time profile that is therapeutic
    and not toxic.

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  • Dosing of antimicrobial drugs in renal patients
  • Antimicrobial and antiprotozoal drugs

Dosage for severe renal failure Half-life Normal/ESRD (h) drug
Maximum 500 mgq 8h 0.09-2.3/5-20 Amoxycillin
Maximum 375 mg q12 h Amoxycillin 0.9-2.3/5-20 Clavulanic acid1/3-4 Amoxycillin Clavulanic acid PO
250-500 mg q6h 0.8-1.5/7-20 ampicillin
1g loading dose then 50 standard dose 1/15 Cefotaxime IV
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Dosage for severe renal failure Half-life Normal/ESRD (h) Drug
0.5-1 g q24h 1.2/13-25 Ceftazidime IV
1-2 g q24h 7-9/12-24 Ceftriaxone IV
750 mg q12h 1.2/17 Cefuroxime IV
Standard dose 1.2/17 Cefuroxime PO
250-500 mg q12h 0.7/16 Cephalexin
Treatment50 standard dose 7-14 days/5- 50 days Chloroquiine
50 standard dose q12h 3-6/6-9 Ciprofloxacin IV/PO
250 mg q12h 2.3-6.0/- Calrithromycin
PCP treatmentStandard dose q48h PCP prophylaxis 25 Standard dose q48-72h Sulphamethoxazole 10/20-50 Trimethoprime 9-13/20-49 Cotrimoxazole IV/PO Sulphamethoxazole/ Trimethoprime
50-75 Standard dose Max 1.5g in 24h 1.4/5-6 Erythromycin IV/PO
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Dosage for severe renal failure Half-life Normal/ESRD (h) Drug
Max PO 500 mg q6hIV 1g q 6 h 0.8-1/3 Flucloxacillin
Titrate to levels 1.8/20-60 Gentamicin IV
250 mg or 3.5 mg/kg q12 h Impenem ¼ Cilastin1/15-24 Impenem/ cilastin IV
50 standard dose q24h 1.1/6-8 Meropenem IV
Standard dose 0.6/4.1 Penoxymethyl-pencillin
4 g q12 h 0.8-1.8/3.3-5.1 Piperacillin IV
4.5 g q12 h Piperacillin 0.18-0.3/3.3-5.1 Dihydrochloride 1/7 Piperacillin/dihydrochloride IV
Treat,emt 5-10 mg/kg q24h 9 healthy,18 malaria/ unchanged Quinine difydrochloride IV
50 standard dose 9-13/20-49 Trimethoprim
Titrate to levels 6-8/200-250 Vancomycin IV
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Dosing of common drugs in renal patients
  • Allopurinol-GFR 30 ml/min use 100mg,60ml/min use
    200mg,90ml/min use 300mg
  • Corticosteroids-no need to change the dose
  • NSAIDs -most are metabolized in the liver ,
    aspirin is a good choice in renal impairment,
  • - In ESRD patients ,no need for dose
    adjustment

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  • In patients with low urine output avoid sulindac
    owing to renal stone formation.
  • Reduce dose of ketoprofen
  • Penicillamine ,avoid if GFR less than 50ml/min
  • Cyclosporine, no dose adjustment in renal
    insufficiency, however use of Cyclosporine can
    worsen renal insufficiency
  • Gold , if GFR 50-75ml/min use 50 of usual dose
    ,if less than 50 avoid gold

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  • Methotrexate ,take care from hematologic toxicity
  • Tacrolimus (FK506,prograf).Gout
  • Sulfasalasine ,no change in dose.
  • Mycophenylate mofetil (cellcept) ,mainly hepatic
    metabolism ,but if GFR less than 25 ml/min reduce
    dose by 25.
  • Tramadol , give dose every 12 h instead of every
    6h
  • Narcotics, avoid using Darvon and Mepiridine, for
    others if GFR less than 10ml/min cut 50 of the
    dose ,if GFR 10-50ml/min use 75 of the dose

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  • You are what you repeatedly do then excellence
    is not an art but just a habit
  • Aristo

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