Do aldosterone synthase inhibitors have adjunctive relevance in selected resistant hypertension phenotypes after kidney transplantation?
Aldosterone synthase inhibitors represent a promising but unstudied class for resistant hypertension in kidney transplant recipients, requiring careful future investigation due to unique physiological challenges in this population.
ABSTRACT Post‐kidney transplantation hypertension is common and is frequently driven by calcineurin inhibitor (CNI)‐mediated sodium retention and vasoconstriction, producing a salt‐sensitive phenotype in which sodium‐chloride cotransporter (NCC) inhibition remains the mechanistically aligned cornerstone of therapy. This opinion piece examines aldosterone synthase inhibitors (ASIs) as an emerging drug class that may have adjunctive relevance in selected resistant phenotypes after kidney transplantation. We summarize the class rationale, distinguish older less selective compounds from newer CYP11B2‐selective agents, and position baxdrostat within the broader ASI landscape alongside lorundrostat, vicadrostat, and earlier‐stage dexfadrostat data. In non‐transplant populations, baxdrostat and lorundrostat have lowered blood pressure in uncontrolled or resistant hypertension, whereas vicadrostat has shown cardiorenal promise in chronic kidney disease, including combination development with empagliflozin. However, no ASI has been studied in kidney transplant recipients. This gap is especially important because transplant recipients have reduced nephron reserve, frequent CNI exposure, narrow potassium margins, and a hypertensive phenotype often dominated by NCC activation rather than uniform aldosterone excess. Accordingly, ASIs should be viewed in transplantation as hypothesis‐generating investigational agents rather than therapeutic recommendations. Any transplant‐specific trial should incorporate rigorous hyperkalemia monitoring, comparator arms that reflect optimized NCC‐directed therapy, and formal assessment of drug‐drug interactions with immunosuppressants.
Corrêa et al. (Fri,) studied this question.