Among subjects with moderate to severe sHPT undergoing haemodialysis, combined therapy with cinacalcet and low doses of vitamin D sterols improved achievement of the biochemical targets for CKD-MBD recommended by the KDOQI guidelines.
The effects of renal impairment on the pharmacokinetics of ceftriaxone in humans were examined after intravenous infusion of a 1-g dose over 15 min to 30 renally impaired patients. The study included 12 dialysis patients and 18 patients with severe, moderate, or mild renal impairment. Plasma and, where appropriate, urine and dialysate samples were collected at predetermined times and analyzed for ceftriaxone by highpressure liquid chromatography. The elimination half-life (group mean ranged from 11.7 to 17.3 h) and plasma clearance (group mean ranged from 529 to 705 ml/h) did not correlate linearly with creatinine clearance. The renal clearance and fraction of dose excreted unchanged in urine were related'linearly, however weakly, with creatinine clearance. Ceftriaxone was not, removed from plasma to a significant extent during hemodialysis. The half-life was prolonged twofold, the plasma clearance was lowered less than 50%, and the volume of distribution was relatively unchanged in renally impaired patients compared with young or elderly healthy subjects with normal renal function at an equivalent dose. Since these changes are moderate, adjustment in the dosage regimen of ceftriaxone for patients with impaired renal ftinction should not be necessary when ceftriaxone
Background and objectives The calcimimetic cinacalcet reduced the risk of death or cardiovascular (CV) events in older, but not younger, patients with moderate to severe secondary hyperparathyroidism (HPT) who were receiving hemodialysis. To determine whether the lower risk in younger patients might be due to lower baseline CV risk and more frequent use of cointerventions that reduce parathyroid hormone (kidney transplantation, parathyroidectomy, and commercial cinacalcet use), this study examined the effects of cinacalcet in older ($65 years, n=1005) and younger (,65 years, n=2878) patients.Design, setting, participants, & measurements Evaluation of Cinacalcet HCl Therapy to Lower Cardiovascular Events (EVOLVE) was a global, multicenter, randomized placebo-controlled trial in 3883 prevalent patients on hemodialysis, whose outcomes included death, major CV events, and development of severe unremitting HPT. The age subgroup analysis was prespecified.Results Older patients had higher baseline prevalence of diabetes mellitus and CV comorbidity. Annualized rates of kidney transplantation and parathyroidectomy were .3-fold higher in younger relative to older patients and were more frequent in patients randomized to placebo. In older patients, the adjusted relative hazard (95% confidence interval) for the primary composite (CV) end point (cinacalcet versus placebo) was 0.70 (0.60 to 0.81); in younger patients, the relative hazard was 0.97 (0.86 to 1.09). Corresponding adjusted relative hazards for mortality were 0.68 (0.51 to 0.81) and 0.99 (0.86 to 1.13). Reduction in the risk of severe unremitting HPT was similar in both groups.
ConclusionsIn the EVOLVE trial, cinacalcet decreased the risk of death and of major CV events in older, but not younger, patients with moderate to severe HPT who were receiving hemodialysis. Effect modification by age may be partly explained by differences in underlying CV risk and differential application of cointerventions that reduce parathyroid hormone.
The occurrence of chronic kidney disease in the Hawai'i KEEP-2 study was nearly fourfold greater compared with the general US population. The clustering of susceptibility factors for chronic kidney disease occurrence was found to differ for all five ethnic groups.
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