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Implementation and effectiveness of an intensive education program on phosphate control among hemodialysis patients: a non-randomized, single-arm, single-center trial.
Yin, J, Yin, J, Lian, R, Li, P, Zheng, J
BMC nephrology. 2021;(1):243
Abstract
BACKGROUND Hyperphosphatemia is a common complication in patients on maintenance hemodialysis. Patients' adherence to phosphorus control can be improved by consistent education. However, few studies have focused on the model construction and effects of health education on phosphate control for hemodialysis patients. OBJECTIVE To develop an intensive education program focusing on phosphate control among hemodialysis patients and to analyze the effectiveness of this program. DESIGN A non-randomized, single-arm, single-center trial lasting for 6 months. SETTING This program was conducted in a hemodialysis center in a teaching hospital in Zhuhai, China. PARTICIPANTS Patients on maintenance hemodialysis with hyperphosphatemia. METHODS An intensive hyperphosphatemia control education program lasting for 6 months was conducted among 366 hemodialysis patients applying the First Principles of Instruction model, which focused on mastering four stages: (a) activation of prior experience, (b) demonstration of skills, (c) application of skills and (d) integration of these skills into real-world activities. The controlled percentage of serum phosphorus, knowledge of hyperphosphatemia, and adherence to phosphate binders before and after the education program were assessed. RESULTS The proportion of controlled serum phosphorus was significantly increased from 43.5 to 54.9% (P<0.001). The scores on the knowledge of phosphate control were improved significantly from 59.0 ± 18.9 to 80.6 ± 12.4 (P < 0.001). The proportion of high adherence to phosphate binders was increased dramatically from 21.9 to 44.5% (P < 0.001). CONCLUSION The intensive education program can effectively improve serum phosphorus, knowledge of hyperphosphatemia, and adherence to phosphate binders among hemodialysis patients. TRIAL REGISTRATION Chinese Clinical Trial Registry, ChiCTR2100042017 . Retrospectively registered January 12th, 2021.
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Intensified treatment of hyperphosphatemia associated with reduction in parathyroid hormone in patients on maintenance hemodialysis.
Chen, L, He, JX, Chen, YY, Ling, YS, Lin, CH, Guan, TJ
Renal failure. 2018;(1):15-21
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BACKGROUND This study investigated the therapeutic effect of intensive phosphorus-lowering therapy on intact-parathyroid hormone (iPTH) levels in hemodialysis patients. METHODS Ninety-five hemodialysis patients with serum phosphorus ≥1.78 mmol/L and iPTH ≥300 pg/dL were apportioned to either the treatment or control group (n = 43 and 52, respectively) based on patient commitment to treatment. The treatment group was given phosphorus-lowering therapies with phosphate binders (lanthanum, sevelamer or/and calcium reagent) combined with dietary phosphate restriction and intensified hemodialysis. The control individuals were given low doses of calcium agents, if serum calcium was <2.54 mmol/L. Percent changes in serum phosphorus and iPTH levels were compared between the two groups. In addition, based on the time required to achieve >20% decrease in serum phosphorus, the patients in the treatment group were further stratified as rapid responders (≤2 months; 27 patients) or slow responders (>2 months; 16 patients) and percent changes in iPTH were compared. RESULTS Serum phosphorus and iPTH levels decreased from baseline in the treatment group (-24.08 ± 1.93% and -9.92 ± 3.70%, respectively) but increased in the control group (22.00 ± 3.63% and 104.21 ± 23.89%; both p < .001). In the rapid responders subgroup, the iPTH decreased (-16.93 ± 3.49%), but in the slow responders subgroup the iPTH increased slightly (0.68 ± 7.37%, p < .05). CONCLUSIONS For these patients on maintenance hemodialysis, intensive treatment of hyperphosphatemia was associated with a decrease in iPTH levels, especially for those who had achieved substantial reduction in serum phosphorus within 2 months.
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Phosphate Binding Therapy to Lower Serum Fibroblast-Growth-Factor-23 Concentrations in Chronic Kidney Disease: Rationale and Study Design of the Sevelamer on FGF23 Trial (SoFT).
Adema, AY, de Jong, MA, de Borst, MH, Ter Wee, PM, Vervloet, MG, ,
Nephron. 2016;(4):215-220
Abstract
BACKGROUND Increased levels of phosphate and fibroblast growth factor-23 (FGF23) are strong predictors of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Preliminary data suggest that interventions lowering gastro-intestinal phosphate uptake lowers serum FGF23 concentrations and improves cardiovascular risk and subsequently survival. However, data are lacking about the magnitude of effects, the effect in different stages of CKD and whether there is a dose-effect relationship. METHODS Therefore, the Sevelamer on FGF23 Trial (SoFT) is designed as an open-label, single-arm, clinical pilot study aiming to demonstrate the feasibility of a phosphate-restricted diet in combination with the phosphate binder sevelamer to induce an effective, predictable and sustained decrease in FGF23 level in patients with an estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) of 15-90 or >90 ml/min/1.73 m2 with proteinuria >1.0 g in 24 h urine collection, despite optimally dosed RAAS blockade, without inducing hypophosphatemia using a forced uptitration treatment regimen aimed at restricting phosphate uptake.
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The Phosphate Binder Ferric Citrate and Mineral Metabolism and Inflammatory Markers in Maintenance Dialysis Patients: Results From Prespecified Analyses of a Randomized Clinical Trial.
Van Buren, PN, Lewis, JB, Dwyer, JP, Greene, T, Middleton, J, Sika, M, Umanath, K, Abraham, JD, Arfeen, SS, Bowline, IG, et al
American journal of kidney diseases : the official journal of the National Kidney Foundation. 2015;(3):479-88
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BACKGROUND Phosphate binders are the cornerstone of hyperphosphatemia management in dialysis patients. Ferric citrate is an iron-based oral phosphate binder that effectively lowers serum phosphorus levels. STUDY DESIGN 52-week, open-label, phase 3, randomized, controlled trial for safety-profile assessment. SETTING & PARTICIPANTS Maintenance dialysis patients with serum phosphorus levels ≥6.0 mg/dL after washout of prior phosphate binders. INTERVENTION 2:1 randomization to ferric citrate or active control (sevelamer carbonate and/or calcium acetate). OUTCOMES Changes in mineral bone disease, protein-energy wasting/inflammation, and occurrence of adverse events after 1 year. MEASUREMENTS Serum calcium, intact parathyroid hormone, phosphorus, aluminum, white blood cell count, percentage of lymphocytes, serum urea nitrogen, and bicarbonate. RESULTS There were 292 participants randomly assigned to ferric citrate, and 149, to active control. Groups were well matched. For mean changes from baseline, phosphorus levels decreased similarly in the ferric citrate and active control groups (-2.04±1.99 [SD] vs -2.18±2.25 mg/dL, respectively; P=0.9); serum calcium levels increased similarly in the ferric citrate and active control groups (0.22±0.90 vs 0.31±0.95 mg/dL; P=0.2). Hypercalcemia occurred in 4 participants receiving calcium acetate. Parathyroid hormone levels decreased similarly in the ferric citrate and active control groups (-167.1±399.8 vs -152.7±392.1 pg/mL; P=0.8). Serum albumin, bicarbonate, serum urea nitrogen, white blood cell count and percentage of lymphocytes, and aluminum values were similar between ferric citrate and active control. Total and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels were lower in participants receiving sevelamer than those receiving ferric citrate and calcium acetate. Fewer participants randomly assigned to ferric citrate had serious adverse events compared with active control. LIMITATIONS Open-label study, few peritoneal dialysis patients. CONCLUSIONS Ferric citrate was associated with similar phosphorus control compared to active control, with similar effects on markers of bone and mineral metabolism in dialysis patients. There was no evidence of protein-energy wasting/inflammation or aluminum toxicity, and fewer participants randomly assigned to ferric citrate had serious adverse events. Ferric citrate is an effective phosphate binder with a safety profile comparable to sevelamer and calcium acetate.
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Plasma p-cresol lowering effect of sevelamer in peritoneal dialysis patients: evidence from a Cross-Sectional Observational Study.
Guida, B, Cataldi, M, Riccio, E, Grumetto, L, Pota, A, Borrelli, S, Memoli, A, Barbato, F, Argentino, G, Salerno, G, et al
PloS one. 2013;(8):e73558
Abstract
p-Cresol is a by-product of the metabolism of aromatic aminoacid operated by resident intestinal bacteria. In patients with chronic kidney disease, the accumulation of p-cresol and of its metabolite p-cresyl-sulphate causes endothelial dysfunction and ultimately increases the cardiovascular risk of these patients. Therapeutic strategies to reduce plasma p-cresol levels are highly demanded but not available yet. Because it has been reported that the phosphate binder sevelamer sequesters p-cresol in vitro we hypothesized that it could do so also in peritoneal dialysis patients. To explore this hypothesis we measured total cresol plasma concentrations in 57 patients with end-stage renal disease on peritoneal dialysis, 29 receiving sevelamer for the treatment of hyperphosphatemia and 28 patients not assuming this drug. Among the patients not assuming sevelamer, 16 were treated with lanthanum whereas the remaining 12 received no drug because they were not hyperphosphatemic. Patients receiving sevelamer had plasma p-cresol and serum high sensitivity C-reactive protein concentrations significantly lower than those receiving lanthanum or no drug. Conversely, no difference was observed among the different groups either in residual glomerular filtration rate, total weekly dialysis dose, total clearance, urine volume, protein catabolic rate, serum albumin or serum phosphate levels. Multiple linear regression analysis showed that none of these variables predicted plasma p-cresol concentrations that, instead, negatively correlated with the use of sevelamer. These results suggest that sevelamer could be an effective strategy to lower p-cresol circulating levels in peritoneal dialysis patients in which it could also favorably affect cardiovascular risk because of its anti-inflammatory effect.
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Overcoming platinum resistance through the use of a copper-lowering agent.
Fu, S, Naing, A, Fu, C, Kuo, MT, Kurzrock, R
Molecular cancer therapeutics. 2012;(6):1221-5
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Low levels of human copper transporter 1 (hCtr1) mRNA are associated with a shorter progression-free survival after platinum-based therapy. Pretreatment with a copper-lowering agent such as trientine enhanced hCtr1-mediated platinum uptake. Therefore, we conducted a pilot study (NCT01178112) of carboplatin and trientine with the goal of resensitizing patients with advanced cancer to platinum chemotherapy. This case report reviews the outcomes of 5 patients with platinum-resistant high-grade epithelial ovarian cancer enrolled on the study to date. Overall, they tolerated treatment well. Severe adverse events that occurred in 2 patients were myelosuppression, notably anemia requiring transfusion. Dose-limiting toxicity was not observed within the first 28 days (cycle 1). After 2 cycles of therapy, partial remission was achieved in 1 patient (10+ months), stable disease in 3 patients (2, 3.5+, and 5 months, respectively), and 1 patient had progressive disease. These cases provide preliminary clinical evidence that the role of decreasing copper levels in reversing platinum resistance merits additional clinical investigation. Evaluation of this novel strategy is warranted in larger studies to assess the efficacy of this approach for treating platinum-resistant advanced epithelial ovarian cancer in patients with high copper levels.
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Transplantation of ex vivo expanded cord blood cells using the copper chelator tetraethylenepentamine: a phase I/II clinical trial.
de Lima, M, McMannis, J, Gee, A, Komanduri, K, Couriel, D, Andersson, BS, Hosing, C, Khouri, I, Jones, R, Champlin, R, et al
Bone marrow transplantation. 2008;(9):771-8
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The copper chelator tetraethylenepentamine (TEPA; StemEx) was shown to attenuate the differentiation of ex vivo cultured hematopoietic cells resulting in preferential expansion of early progenitors. A phase I/II trial was performed to test the feasibility and safety of transplantation of CD133+ cord blood (CB) hematopoietic progenitors cultured in media containing stem cell factor, FLT-3 ligand, interleukin-6, thrombopoietin and TEPA. Ten patients with advanced hematological malignancies were transplanted with a CB unit originally frozen in two fractions. The smaller fraction was cultured ex vivo for 21 days and transplanted 24 h after infusion of the larger unmanipulated fraction. All but two units contained <2 x 10(7) total nucleated cells (TNCs) per kilogram pre-expansion. All donor-recipient pairs were mismatched for one or two HLA loci. Nine patients were beyond first remission; median age and weight were 21 years and 68.5 kg. The average TNCs fold expansion was 219 (range, 2-620). Mean increase of CD34+ cell count was 6 (over the CD34+ cell content in the entire unit). Despite the low TNCs per kilogram infused (median=1.8 x 10(7)/kg), nine patients engrafted. Median time to neutrophil and platelet engraftment was 30 (range, 16-46) and 48 (range, 35-105) days. There were no cases of grades 3-4 acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) and 100-day survival was 90%. This strategy is feasible.
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IQ and blood lead from 2 to 7 years of age: are the effects in older children the residual of high blood lead concentrations in 2-year-olds?
Chen, A, Dietrich, KN, Ware, JH, Radcliffe, J, Rogan, WJ
Environmental health perspectives. 2005;(5):597-601
Abstract
Increases in peak blood lead concentrations, which occur at 18-30 months of age in the United States, are thought to result in lower IQ scores at 4-6 years of age, when IQ becomes stable and measurable. Data from a prospective study conducted in Boston suggested that blood lead concentrations at 2 years of age were more predictive of cognitive deficits in older children than were later blood lead concentrations or blood lead concentrations measured concurrently with IQ. Therefore, cross-sectional associations between blood lead and IQ in school-age children have been widely interpreted as the residual effects of higher blood lead concentrations at an earlier age or the tendency of less intelligent children to ingest more leaded dust or paint chips, rather than as a causal relationship in older children. Here we analyze data from a clinical trial in which children were treated for elevated blood lead concentrations (20-44 microg/dL) at about 2 years of age and followed until 7 years of age with serial IQ tests and measurements of blood lead. We found that cross-sectional associations increased in strength as the children became older, whereas the relation between baseline blood lead and IQ attenuated. Peak blood lead level thus does not fully account for the observed association in older children between their lower blood lead concentrations and IQ. The effect of concurrent blood level on IQ may therefore be greater than currently believed.
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Estimation of glomerular filtration rate in paediatric cancer patients using 51CR-EDTA population pharmacokinetics.
Cole, M, Price, L, Parry, A, Keir, MJ, Pearson, AD, Boddy, AV, Veal, GJ
British journal of cancer. 2004;(1):60-4
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Estimation of glomerular filtration rate (GFR) using the clearance of chromium 51 EDTA ((51)Cr-EDTA) (or other radiolabelled isotopes) is reliable, but invasive and not always practicable. Mathematical models have been devised for estimating GFR using readily obtainable patient characteristics. Unfortunately, these models were developed using various patient populations and may not provide the optimal prediction of GFR in children with cancer. The current study uses population pharmacokinetics to determine the relationship between (51)Cr-EDTA clearance, and patient covariates in 50 paediatric cancer patients. These models were validated using a separate group of 43 children and were compared with previously published models of renal function. Body size was the major determinant of (51)Cr-EDTA clearance and inclusion of weight or surface area reduced the residual variability between individuals (coefficient of variation) from 61 to 32%. Serum creatinine was the only other parameter that significantly improved the model. Mean percentage error values of -5.0 and -1.1% were observed for models including weight alone or weight and creatinine, respectively, with precision estimates of 21.7 and 20.0%. These simple additive models provide a more rationale approach than the use of complex formulae, involving additional parameters, to predict renal function.
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[Early treatment of secondary hyperparathyroidism in moderate renal insufficiency: low-phosphorus diet versus calcium carbonate].
Aresté, N, Amor, J, Cambil, T, Salgueira, M, Sánchez-Palencia, R, Páez, C, Gómez, O, Palma, A
Nefrologia : publicacion oficial de la Sociedad Espanola Nefrologia. 2003;:64-8
Abstract
Calcitriol deficiency and phosphorus retention are mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis of renal hyperparathyroidism. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of dietary phosphorus restriction versus calcium carbonate treatment for one month on PTH and calcitriol levels in patients with mild renal failure. We studied two groups of patients: Group I: 21 patients (14M/7F); mean age 61 years old; mean glomerular filtration rate 51 ml/min. Their diet contained phosphorus 700 mg/day. Group II: 30 patients (21M/9F); mean age 58; mean glomerular rate 56 ml/min. They were divided in two subgroups: 18 patients treated with calcium carbonate 2.5 g/day and 12 patients with 5 g/day. Serum PTH, calcitriol, 25(OH)D3, calcium, phosphorus and urinary excretion of calcium and phosphorus were measured before and after a 30 day period. The low phosphorus diet (Group I) resulted in a significant decrease in PTH levels (81.3 +/- 35 vs 71 +/- 39 pg/ml, p < 0.05) and significant increase in calcitriol levels (22.4 +/- 4.4 vs 33.4 +/- 7.5 pg/ml, p < 0.05). In our study calcium carbonate treatment (Group II) had no effect on PTH and calcitriol levels.