The Relationship Between Urine Uromodulin and Blood Pressure Changes: The DASH-Sodium Trial.

Pubmed ID: 32856709

Pubmed Central ID: PMC7951043

Journal: American journal of hypertension

Publication Date: March 11, 2021

MeSH Terms: Humans, Hypertension, Blood Pressure, Animals, Sodium Chloride, Dietary, Mice, Dietary Approaches To Stop Hypertension, Uromodulin

Grants: P30 DK072488, UL1 TR001863, K23 HL135273, R21 HL144876, T32 DK104717

Authors: Appel LJ, Miller ER, Parikh CR, Ix JH, Juraschek SP, Rebholz CM, Bakhoum CY, Anderson CAM, Obeid W, Rifkin DE, Garimella PS

Cite As: Bakhoum CY, Anderson CAM, Juraschek SP, Rebholz CM, Appel LJ, Miller ER, Parikh CR, Obeid W, Rifkin DE, Ix JH, Garimella PS. The Relationship Between Urine Uromodulin and Blood Pressure Changes: The DASH-Sodium Trial. Am J Hypertens 2021 Mar 11;34(2):154-156.

Studies:

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Uromodulin modulates the sodium-potassium-two-chloride transporter in the thick ascending limb of the loop of Henle, and its overexpression in murine models leads to salt-induced hypertension. We hypothesized that individuals with higher baseline levels of urine uromodulin would have a greater increase in systolic blood pressure (SBP) for the same increase in sodium compared with those with lower uromodulin levels. METHODS: We used data from 157 subjects randomized to the control diet of the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH)-Sodium trial who were assigned to 30 days of low (1,500 mg/d), medium (2,400 mg/d), and high salt (3,300 mg/d) diets in random order. Blood pressure was measured prerandomization and then weekly during each feeding period. We evaluated the association of prerandomization urine uromodulin with change in SBP between diets, as measured at the end of each feeding period, using multivariable linear regression. RESULTS: Baseline urine uromodulin stratified by tertiles was ≤17.64, 17.65-31.97, and ≥31.98 µg/ml. Across the tertiles, there were no significant differences in SBP at baseline, nor was there a differential effect of sodium diet on SBP across tertiles (low to high, P = 0.81). After adjusting for age, sex, body mass index, and race, uromodulin levels were not significantly associated with SBP change from low to high sodium diet (P = 0.42). CONCLUSIONS: In a randomized trial of different levels of salt intake, higher urine uromodulin levels were not associated with a greater increase in blood pressure in response to high salt intake.