Abstract

We conducted a 3-year randomized placebo-controlled double-blind study to determine the effects of the angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor perindopril (PE) on the progress of renal function and histology in subjects with diabetes and microalbuminuria. Forty non—insulin-dependent (NIDDM) and insulin-dependent (IDDM) diabetic subjects, either normotensive or hypertensive, were randomly assigned to receive PE (n = 20) or placebo (n = 20). A percutaneous renal biopsy was performed initially in all patients and repeated in 29 patients after 3 years. The mean glomerular volume, glomerular basement membrane (GBM) thickness, interstitial fibrosis, sclerosed glomeruli, and volume fraction of capillary lumina were measured histomorphometrically. Before treatment, both groups had similar clinical characteristics, blood pressure, glycosylated hemoglobin (Hb), albumin excretion rate, glomerular filtration rate (GFR), serum creatinine, and renal structural damage. Blood pressure was well controlled in both groups. After 3 years' therapy, there was no significant change in renal function and albuminuria in the PE or placebo groups. The increase in GBM thickness in nine paired biopsies was significantly less in PE-treated subjects ( P = .0275). Interstitial fibrosis tended to increase less in the PE group, although this did not reach statistical significance. This study indicates that long-term therapy with PE may decrease or delay the progression of structural glomerular damage in microalbuminuric diabetic subjects.

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