Interaction of neutrophil counts and folic acid treatment on new-onset proteinuria in hypertensive patients

We aimed to examine whether baseline neutrophil counts affected the risk of new-onset proteinuria in hypertensive patients, and, if so, whether folic acid treatment is particularly effective in proteinuria prevention in such a setting. A total of 8208 eligible participants without proteinuria at bas...

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Veröffentlicht in:British journal of nutrition 2021-10, Vol.126 (7), p.1040-1047
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Zhuxian, Liu, Mengyi, Zhang, Yuanyuan, Zhou, Chun, He, Panpan, Li, Huan, Li, Jianping, Zhang, Yan, Liang, Min, Wang, Binyan, Xu, Xin, Wang, Xiaobin, Huo, Yong, Hou, Fan Fan, Nie, Jing, Xu, Xiping, Qin, Xianhui
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We aimed to examine whether baseline neutrophil counts affected the risk of new-onset proteinuria in hypertensive patients, and, if so, whether folic acid treatment is particularly effective in proteinuria prevention in such a setting. A total of 8208 eligible participants without proteinuria at baseline were analysed from the renal substudy of the China Stroke Primary Prevention Trial. Participants were randomised to receive a double-blind daily treatment of 10 mg of enalapril and 0·8 mg of folic acid (n 4101) or 10 mg of enalapril only (n 4107). The primary outcome was new-onset proteinuria, defined as a urine dipstick reading of ≥1+ at the exit visit. The mean age of the participants was 59·5 (sd, 7·4) years, 3088 (37·6 %) of the participants were male. The median treatment duration was 4·4 years. In the enalapril-only group, a significantly higher risk of new-onset proteinuria was found among participants with higher neutrophil counts (quintile 5; ≥4·8 × 109/l, OR 1·44; 95 % CI 1·00, 2·06), compared with those in quintiles 1–4. For those with enalapril and folic acid treatment, compared with the enalapril-only group, the new-onset proteinuria risk was reduced from 5·2 to 2·8 % (OR 0·49; 95 % CI 0·29, 0·82) among participants with higher neutrophil counts (≥4·8 × 109/l), whereas there was no significant effect among those with neutrophil counts
ISSN:0007-1145
1475-2662
DOI:10.1017/S000711452000505X