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Francisco J López-Hernández

Francisco J López-Hernández
  • Group Leader at Instituto de Investigación Biomédica de Salamanca (IBSAL-IECSCYL)

About

169
Publications
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5,081
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Current institution
Instituto de Investigación Biomédica de Salamanca (IBSAL-IECSCYL)
Current position
  • Group Leader

Publications

Publications (169)
Article
Full-text available
Background/Objectives: Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) have generated a revolutionary approach in the treatment of cancer, but their effectiveness has been compromised by immune-related adverse events, including renal damage. Although rare, these effects are relevant because they have been related to poor patient prognoses. The objective of thi...
Article
Surrogate measures of glomerular filtration rate (GFR) continue to serve as pivotal determinants of the incidence, severity, and management of acute kidney injury (AKI), as well as the primary reference point underpinning knowledge of its pathophysiology. However, several clinically important deficits in aspects of renal excretory function during A...
Article
Background and Aims Cisplatin is an antitumor drug whose use is significantly limited by its nephrotoxicity. Knowledge of the factors that determine or condition the pathogenesis of cisplatin-induced AKI will help to prevent or reduce nephrotoxic outcomes and improve safety during cisplatin treatment. Specifically, we aimed to study the impact of d...
Article
Background and Aims The concomitant use of diuretics, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), and angiotensin system inhibitors is known as Triple Whammy (TW) and significantly increases the risk of acute kidney injury (AKI) due to a reduction in the glomerular filtration rate. Maintenance of hydration contributes to correct kidney perfusio...
Article
Background and Aims Polymedication in patients with chronic diseases, such as hypertension, can lead to undesired drug interactions. The combination of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEIs) or angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARBs) with diuretics and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) can cause triple whammy (TW)-induced acu...
Article
Background and Aims A neural network-based calculator to estimate rat creatinine clearance (ClCr), as a measurement of the glomerular filtration rate (GFR), from paired plasma creatinine concentration and body weight data has been recently developed [1]. Like human GFR estimating formulae, ACLARA averts long experimental procedures and reduces anim...
Article
Full-text available
Accumulating evidence suggests that hyperuricemia is a pathological factor in the development and progression of chronic kidney disease. However, the potential benefit afforded by the control of uric acid (UA) is controversial. Individual studies show discrepant results, and most existing meta-analysis, especially those including the larger number...
Article
Acute kidney frailty is a premorbid condition of diminished renal functional reserve that predisposes to acute kidney injury; this condition results from subclinical wear or distortion of renal homeostatic responses that protect the renal excretory function. Knowledge of its pathophysiological basis is critical for the development of diagnostic and...
Article
Background and Aims Renal frailty (RF) is a premorbid and, at least partly, modifiable condition arising from diminished renal functional reserve and defective adaptive response capacity predisposing to acute kidney injury (AKI). RF ensues from subclinical wear or distortion of the renal haemodynamic and tubular homeostatic responses that defend th...
Article
Background and Aims Drug nephrotoxicity is a serious medical and economic concern. In fact, 25% of the 100 most used drugs in intensive care units are toxic to the kidney, which limits their use and, therefore, the correct therapy for the patient. The administration of contrast media (CM) during diagnostic tests or surgical interventions carries th...
Article
Background and Aims Subclinical sequelae of acute kidney injury (AKI) are commonly associated with the development of chronic kidney disease (CKD). Despite extensive investigation on AKI to CKD transition on different experimental models, the underlying mechanisms of this transition remain unclear, and there are no known biomarkers monitoring this...
Article
Background and Aims Renin-angiotensin system inhibitors, diuretics and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) is known as Triple Whammy (TW), a common combination used in hypertensive patients suffering from pain or inflammation; this combination of drugs can cause in some cases acute kidney injury (AKI). The renal outcome of the TW therapy...
Article
Background and Aims Creatinine clearance (ClCr) is a standard method for the measurement of glomerular filtration rate in rats. Recently, we developed ACLARA, an open and freely available neural network (NN)-based calculator of ClCr in Wistar rats (http://idal.uv.es/aclara). By working solely on plasma creatinine concentration and body weight, ACLA...
Article
Full-text available
Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a syndrome of sudden renal excretory dysfunction with severe health consequences. AKI etiology influences prognosis, with pre-renal showing a more favorable evolution than intrinsic AKI. Because the international diagnostic criteria (i.e., based on plasma creatinine) provide no etiological distinction, anamnestic and ad...
Article
Hypertension is a complex disorder ensuing necessarily from alterations in the pressure-natriuresis relationship, the main determinant of long-term control of blood pressure. This mechanism sets natriuresis to the level of blood pressure, so that increasing pressure translates into higher osmotically driven diuresis to reduce volemia and control bl...
Article
Full-text available
Diagnosis of cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury (CSA-AKI), a syndrome of sudden renal dysfunction occurring in the immediate post-operative period, is still sub-optimal. Standard CSA-AKI diagnosis is performed according to the international criteria for AKI diagnosis, afflicted with insufficient sensitivity, specificity, and prognostic...
Article
Full-text available
Renal tubulo-interstitial fibrosis is characterized by the excessive accumulation of extracellular matrix (ECM) in the tubular interstitium during chronic kidney disease. The main source of ECM proteins are emerging and proliferating myofibroblasts. The sources of myofibroblasts in the renal tubular interstitium have been studied during decades, in...
Article
BACKGROUND AND AIMS Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is the most serious health problem and constitutes the 16th leading cause of death worldwide. Multiple studies have identified acute kidney injury (AKI) as a risk factor for the development and progression of CKD [1]. Despite extensive investigation of AKI and CKD in experimental models, the underlyi...
Article
BACKGROUND AND AIMS Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a threatening, multi-aetiological syndrome encompassing a variety of forms and damage patterns. AKI lacks sufficiently specific diagnostic tools to evaluate the distinct combination of pathophysiological events underlying each case, which limits personalized and optimized handling. Therefore, a patho...
Article
BACKGROUND AND AIMS Hypertension has a high prevalence in adult population and represents an important cause of premature death worldwide. Its treatment often consists of the combination of several antihypertensive drugs, including angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitors (ACEi) or angiotensin receptor blockers (ARB) and diuretics. Hypertensive pat...
Article
BACKGROUND AND AIMS Frailty is a pre-morbid condition characterized by physiological decline and reduced physiological reserve leading to increased vulnerability to disease, especially common among older adults. Tissue and organ function is underpinned by effective haemodynamic regulation coping with everyday acute challenges and stressors. Impairm...
Article
Concurrent use of a diuretic, a renin-angiotensin system (RAS) inhibitor, and a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) significantly increases the risk of acute kidney injury (AKI). This phenomenon is known as "triple whammy". Diuretics and RAS inhibitors, such as an angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor or angiotensin receptor blocke...
Article
Full-text available
Nephrotoxicity is a major cause of intrinsic acute kidney injury (AKI). Because renal tissue damage may occur independently of a reduction in glomerular filtration rate and of elevations in plasma creatinine concentration, so-called injury biomarkers have been proposed to form part of diagnostic criteria as reflective of tubular damage independentl...
Article
Full-text available
Glomerular filtration is a pivotal process of renal physiology, and its alterations are a central pathological event in acute kidney injury and chronic kidney disease. Creatinine clearance (ClCr), a standard method for glomerular filtration rate (GFR) measurement, requires a long and tedious procedure of timed (usually 24 h) urine collection. We ha...
Article
Full-text available
Quercetin, a flavonoid with promising therapeutic potential, has been shown to protect from cisplatin nephrotoxicity in rats following intraperitoneal injection, but its low bioavailability curtails its prospective clinical utility in oral therapy. We recently developed a micellar formulation (P-quercetin) with enhanced solubility and bioavailabili...
Preprint
Full-text available
Concurrent use of a diuretic, a renin-angiotensin system (RAS) inhibitor, and a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) significantly increases the risk of acute kidney injury (AKI). This phenomenon is known as "triple whammy". Diuretics and RAS inhibitors, such as an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor or angiotensin receptor blocker, are...
Article
Full-text available
Introduction Impaired lipid metabolism in the renal tubule plays a prominent role in the progression of renal fibrosis following acute kidney injury (AKI) and in chronic kidney disease (CKD). Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs) are promising druggable targets to mitigate renal fibrosis by redirecting metabolism, including restoratio...
Article
Full-text available
Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a risk factor for new AKI episodes, chronic kidney disease, cardiovascular events and death, as renal repair may be deficient and maladaptive, and activate proinflammatory and profibrotic signals. AKI and AKI recovery definitions are based on changes in plasma creatinine, a parameter mostly associated to glomerular filt...
Article
Full-text available
Contrast-induced nephropathy (CIN) is a complication associated with the administration of contrast media (CM). The CIN diagnosis is based on creatinine, a biomarker late and insensitive. The objective proposed was to evaluate the ability of novel biomarkers to detect patients susceptible to suffering CIN before CM administration. The study was car...
Article
Full-text available
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a progressive impairment of renal function for more than three months that affects 15% of the adult population. Because oxidative stress is involved in its pathogenesis, antioxidants are under study for the prophylaxis of CKD progression. The objective of this work was to meta-analyze the efficacy of antioxidant ther...
Article
Introduction: Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a threatening, multiaetiological syndrome encompassing a variety of forms and damage patterns. AKI lacks sufficiently specific diagnostic tools to evaluate the distinct combination of pathophysiological events underlying each case, which limits personalized and optimized handling. Therefore, a pathophysio...
Article
Full-text available
The clinical utility of the chemotherapeutic drug cisplatin is significantly limited by its nephrotoxicity, which is characterized by electrolytic disorders, glomerular filtration rate decline, and azotemia. These alterations are consequences of a primary tubulopathy causing injury to proximal and distal epithelial cells, and thus tubular dysfuncti...
Article
Clinical frailty in the elderly is defined by a composite measure of functional psychomotor decline. Herein, we develop the concept of haemodynamic frailty (HDF), a state of increased predisposition to disease prevalent in the elderly and characterised by impairment of the network of compensatory responses governing the defence of circulatory volum...
Article
Background and Aims Acute kidney injury (AKI) represents a clinical problem due to its increasing prevalence and association with further morbidities. Observational studies have shown that AKI increases the risk of a new AKI episode, chronic kidney disease (CKD), CKD progression, end-stage renal disease (ESRD), and mortality. Serum creatinine (sCr)...
Article
Background and Aims Chronic kidney disease (CKD) represents an enormous problem for healthcare systems. It is estimated that in USA more than 37 million people suffer from this disease. Risk factors include hypertension, diabetes mellitus, older age, proteinuria and previous episodes of acute kidney injury (AKI). Indeed, several studies have shown...
Article
Full-text available
Apoptosis is a programmed form of cell death culminating in packing cell content and corpse dismantling into membrane sealed vesicles called apoptotic bodies (ABs). Apoptotic bodies are engulfed and disposed by neighboring and immune system cells without eliciting a noxious inflammatory response, thus preventing sterile tissue damage. AB formation...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background. Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a risk factor for new AKI episodes and progression to chronic kidney disease, cardiovascular events and death, as under certain circumstances renal repair is maladaptive leading to proinflammatory and profibrotic signals. The definition for AKI recovery is based on increases in plasma creatinine, but it only...
Article
Full-text available
The antioxidant flavonoid quercetin has been shown to prevent nephrotoxicity in animal models and in a clinical study and is thus a very promising prophylactic candidate under development. Quercetin solubility is very low, which handicaps clinical application. The aim of this work was to study, in rats, the bioavailability and nephroprotective effi...
Article
Cisplatin is an effective chemotherapeutic drug whose clinical use and efficacy are limited by its nephrotoxicity, which affects mainly the renal tubules and vasculature. It accumulates in proximal and distal epithelial tubule cells and causes oxidative stress-mediated cell death and malfunction. Consequently, many antioxidants have been tested for...
Article
Acute kidney injury (AKI) diagnosis relies on plasma creatinine concentration (Crpl), a relatively insensitive, surrogate biomarker of glomerular filtration rate that increases only after significant damage befalls. However, damage in different renal structures may occur without increments in Crpl, a condition known as subclinical AKI. Thus, detect...
Article
Full-text available
Obesity is a major factor in contemporary clinical practice in nephrology. Obesity accelerates the progression of both diabetic and non-diabetic chronic kidney disease and, in renal transplantation, both recipient and donor obesity increase the risk of allograft complications. Obesity is thus a major driver of renal disease progression and a barrie...
Article
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Deficient recovery from acute kidney injury (AKI) has immediate and long-term health, clinical and economic consequences. Pre-emptive recovery estimation may improve nephrology referral, optimize decision making, enrollment in trials, and provide key information for subsequent clinical handling and follow-up. For this purpose, new biomarkers are ne...
Article
Simultaneous administration of certain antihypertensive (renin-angiotensin system inhibitors and diuretics) and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) is associated with a renal toxicity syndrome known as "triple whammy" acute kidney injury (TW-AKI), yet poorly characterized at the pathophysiological level, as no specific experimental model...
Article
Full-text available
Cardiovascular diseases are associated to risk factors as obesity, hypertension and diabetes. The transforming growth factor-β1 receptors ALK1 and endoglin regulate blood pressure and vascular homeostasis. However, no studies relate the association of ALK1 and endoglin polymorphisms with cardiovascular risk factors. We analysed the predictive value...
Article
Full-text available
Background and Aims It is increasingly clear that acute kidney injury (AKI) can result in the development of chronic kidney disease (CKD) in humans. Murine renal unilateral ischemia-reperfusion injury (UIRI) models this AKI-to-CKD progression in the injured kidney in the presence of its healthy counterpart (Le Clef et al, Plos One 2016). In mice, w...
Article
Neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL) is a secreted low-molecular weight iron-siderophore binding protein. NGAL overexpression in injured tubular epithelia partly explain its utility as a sensitive and early urinary biomarker of acute kidney injury (AKI). Herein, we extend mechanistic insights into the source and kinetics of urinary NGA...
Article
Full-text available
Introduction Cisplatin is a potent antineoplastic drug that has been widely used to treat a number of solid tumors. However, a high incidence of renal damage observed in patients has led researchers to search for alternate strategies that prevent or at least reduce the cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity. The objective of the present study was to cond...
Article
Full-text available
Nephrotoxicity is an important limitation to the clinical use of many drugs and contrast media. Drug nephrotoxicity occurs in acute, subacute and chronic manifestations ranging from glomerular, tubular, vascular and immunological phenotypes to acute kidney injury. Pre-emptive risk assessment of drug nephrotoxicity poses an urgent need of precision...
Article
Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a serious syndrome with increasing incidence and health consequences, and high mortality rate among critically ill patients. AKI lacks a unified definition, has ambiguous semantic boundaries, and relies on defective diagnosis. This, in part, is due to the absence of biomarkers sub-stratifying AKI patients into pathophys...
Article
Full-text available
Ulcerative colitis is a relatively frequent, chronic disease that impacts significantly the patient’s quality of life. Although many therapeutic options are available, additional approaches are needed because many patients either do not respond to current therapies or show significant side effects. Cardiotrophin-1 (CT-1) is a cytokine with potent c...
Preprint
Full-text available
Ulcerative colitis (UC) is a relatively frequent, chronic disease that impacts significantly the patient’s quality of life. Although many therapeutic options are available, additional approaches are needed because many patients either do not respond to current therapies or show significant side effects. Cardiotrophin-1 (CT-1) is a cytokine with pot...
Article
Full-text available
Iodinated contrast media (CM) are the leading cause of acute renal failure of toxic origin. Between 21% and 50% of patients that receive them develop contrast-induced nephropathy (CIN). All prophylactic measures used so far have failed to provide effective prevention. Since oxidative stress is involved in the damage, a possible preventive strategy...
Article
Full-text available
Aim Chronic kidney disease is characterized by tubulointerstitial fibrosis involving inflammation, tubular apoptosis, fibroblast proliferation and extracellular matrix accumulation. Cardiotrophin‐1, a member of the interleukin‐6 family of cytokines, protects several organs from damage by promoting survival and anti‐inflammatory effects. However, wh...
Article
Background: Cold ischemia-reperfusion injury is unavoidable during organ transplantation, and prolonged preservation is associated with poorer function recovery. Cardiotrophin-1 (CT-1) is an IL-6 family cytokine with cytoprotective properties. This preclinical study in rats tested whether CT-1 mitigates cold renal ischemia-reperfusion injury in th...
Article
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Scientific Reports 7: Article number: 41875; published online: 03 February 2017; updated: 11 May 2018 This Article contains typographical errors in the Acknowledgements section. “This work was supported by grants from Instituto de Salud Carlos III (Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness, PI12/00959, PI13/01741, RETICS RD012/0005/004 and RD012/0021...
Article
Nephrotoxicity is the main limitation to the dosage and anticancer efficacy of cisplatin. Cisplatin produces tubular epithelial cell apoptosis and necrosis depending on the concentration of the drug. Protection from cisplatin nephrotoxicity must therefore tackle both cell death modes. For its ability to reduce cisplatin reactivity, in addition to i...
Article
Cardiotrophin-1 (CT-1) holds potent anti-inflammatory, cytoprotective and anti-apoptotic effects in the liver, kidneys and heart. In this study the role of endogenous CT-1 and the effect of exogenous CT-1 were evaluated in experimental ulcerative colitis. Colitis was induced in CT-1 knock-out and wild type mice by administration of dextran sodium s...
Article
Strategies to minimize the nephrotoxicity of platinated antineoplastics without affecting its antitumour efficacy are strongly necessary to improve the pharmacotoxicological profile of these drugs. The natural flavonoid quercetin has been shown to afford nephroprotection without affecting cisplatin antitumour effect. The purpose of the present stud...
Article
The clinical utility of aminoglycoside antibiotics is partly limited by their nephrotoxicity. Co-administration of a variety of candidate nephroprotectants has been tested at the preclinical level. According to a recent meta-analytic study, antioxidants are the only family of compounds with enough preclinical documentation to draw solid conclusions...
Article
Full-text available
Hypertension, diabetes and obesity are cardiovascular risk factors closely associated to the development of renal and cardiovascular target organ damage. VAV2 and VAV3, members of the VAV family proto-oncogenes, are guanosine nucleotide exchange factors for the Rho and Rac GTPase family, which is related with cardiovascular homeostasis. We have ana...
Article
Full-text available
Iron deficiency has been associated with kidney injury. Deferasirox is an oral iron chelator used to treat blood transfusion-related iron overload. Nephrotoxicity is the most serious and common adverse effect of deferasirox and may present as an acute or chronic kidney disease. However, scarce data are available on the molecular mechanisms of nephr...
Article
Nephrotoxicity limits the use of aminoglycoside antibiotics. Kidney damage is produced mainly in the renal tubule due to an inflammatory and oxidative process. At preclinical level, many drugs and natural products have been tested as prospective protectors of aminoglycoside nephrotoxicity. The main objective of this work was to make a systematic li...
Article
Upregulated synthesis of extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins by myofibroblasts is a common phenomenon in the development of fibrosis. Although the role of TGF-β in fibrosis development has been extensively studied, the involvement of other members of this superfamily of cytokines, the bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) in organ fibrosis has given c...
Article
Vascular calcification remains one of the main factors associated to morbidity and mortality in both ageing and chronic kidney disease. Both hyperphosphataemia, a well-known promoter of vascular calcification, and abnormal processing defects of lamin A/C have been associated to ageing. The main aim of this study was to analyse the effect of phospho...
Article
Full-text available
Early detection of hypertensive end-organ damage and secondary diseases are key determinants of cardiovascular prognosis in patients suffering from arterial hypertension. Presently, there are no biomarkers for the detection of hypertensive target organ damage, most outstandingly including blood vessels, the heart, and the kidneys. We aimed to valid...

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