Use of sevelamer to examine the role of intraluminal phosphate in the pathogenesis of secondary hyperparathyroidism.

Authors
Category Primary study
JournalClinical nephrology
Year 2014
AIMS: Parathyroid hormone (PTH) promotes calcium reabsorption in the cortical distal nephron (CDN). The phosphate concentration ([P]f) rises in that segment in chronic kidney disease (CKD); in theory, high [P]f could reduce availability of calcium for reabsorption and necessitate a compensatory rise in [PTH]. With assumptions, [P]f is proportional to phosphate excreted/volume of filtrate (EP/GFR). We therefore hypothesized that [PTH] would correlate with EP/GFR in CKD, and ΔPTH] would correlate with ΔEP/GFR after sevelamer therapy. METHODS: We conducted a 4-week, placebo-controlled trial of sevelamer carbonate in patients with CKD. [PTH]1-84 and parameters of phosphate homeostasis were measured before and after treatment. GFR was assumed to equal creatinine clearance (Ccr). Pertinent linear regressions were performed. RESULTS: Phosphate excretion fell in the sevelamer group only. Decrements in [PTH] with sevelamer differed from increments with placebo. With either treatment, [PTH] correlated with EP/Ccr and ΔPTH] correlated with ΔEP/Ccr. Changes in [PTH] were minimal in some sevelamer recipients despite reductions in EP/Ccr; calcium excreted/volume of filtrate was low in these subjects. CONCLUSIONS: Phosphate influx affected [PTH] in CKD by determining [P]f in the CDN. In some patients, low calcium influx may have blunted the effect of sevelamer on [PTH].
Epistemonikos ID: 5cb4d3cc1b852f606b614903470d7085ce26f3b0
First added on: Jan 15, 2017