Table 4.
Authors | Year | Study Design | Type of MRA | Patient Category | Risk of Hyperkalemia |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alexandrou et al. [12] | 2019 | meta-analysis | spironolactone, eplerenone | 9 study groups: patients with diabetic nephropathy 3 study groups: patients with nondiabetic proteinuric CKD 2 study groups: patients with resistant hypertension and diabetes mellitus 1 study group: patients with hypertension and albuminuria |
no significant risk |
Currie et al. [33] | 2016 | meta-analysis | spironolactone, eplerenone | patients with CKD stages 1–5 not requiring renal replacement therapy, with albuminuria or proteinuria | no significant risk |
Lin et al. [38] | 2015 | randomized and placebo-controlled study | spironolactone | patients with ESRD undergoing stable hemodialysis from outpatient dialysis units or peritoneal dialysis | no significant risk |
Feniman-De-Stefano et al. [39] | 2015 | double blind parallel RCT | spironolactone | patients on hemodialysis who presented with LVMI >51 g/m | no significant risk |
Walsh et al. [45] | 2015 | parallel RCT | eplerenone | patients on hemodialysis | no significant risk |
Itoh et al. [46] | 2019 | multicenter, single-arm, open-label | esaxerenone | hypertensive patients with type 2 diabetes and albuminuria | increased risk in patients with moderate renal impairment and type 2 diabetes and albuminuria |
RCT, Randomized controlled trial.