Literature DB >> 10633466

What is the optimal regimen for vitamin D?

J Cunningham1.   

Abstract

The past 30 years have seen substantial advances in our understanding of the pathogenesis of the mineral, hormonal and skeletal disorders that comprise renal osteodystrophy. The introduction of calcitriol and alfacalcidol as treatments for this disorder in the early 1970s represented an enormous step forward in clinical practice, but unfortunately, the subsequent refinement of these therapies still leaves us well short of the ideal: hyperphosphatemia and hypercalcemia induced by the vitamin D metabolites, and failure to control parathyroid hyperplasia, all remain problematic. Novel pulsed regimens using alfacalcidol and calcitriol, while clearly effective, have not fulfilled initial high expectations of superiority in the context of comparative studies. New vitamin D metabolites, some of which have exhibited desirable selectivity in experimental settings with reduced tendency to raise phosphate and/or calcium while maintaining good control of the parathyroid glands, are now being evaluated. Of these, 22-oxacalcitriol, paricalcitol (19 nor-1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D2) and doxercalciferol (1 alpha-hydroxyvitamin D2) have all shown high efficacy when compared with placebo, but so also did alfacalcidol and calcitriol in similar studies in the 1970s and 1980s. The results of randomized studies comparing the new vitamin D metabolites with current standard therapy (alfacalcidol or calcitriol) are either not yet available or show uncertain benefits in relation to hypercalcemia, hyperphosphatemia and hyperparathyroidism. The impact of these new metabolites on the increasing prevalence of low turnover bone disease is unknown, although experimentally there is evidence of potentially important differences at the level of the skeleton.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  1999        PMID: 10633466     DOI: 10.1046/j.1523-1755.1999.07307.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Kidney Int Suppl        ISSN: 0098-6577            Impact factor:   10.545


  4 in total

1.  The calcimimetic agent KRN 1493 lowers plasma parathyroid hormone and ionized calcium concentrations in patients with chronic renal failure on haemodialysis both on the day of haemodialysis and on the day without haemodialysis.

Authors:  Naro Ohashi; Toshihiko Uematsu; Satoru Nagashima; Mitsutaka Kanamaru; Akashi Togawa; Akira Hishida; Eiji Uchida; Tadao Akizawa; Shozo Koshikawa
Journal:  Br J Clin Pharmacol       Date:  2004-06       Impact factor: 4.335

Review 2.  Vitamin D in patients with renal failure: a summary of observational mortality studies and steps moving forward.

Authors:  Myles Wolf; Ravi Thadhani
Journal:  J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol       Date:  2007-01-02       Impact factor: 4.292

Review 3.  Paricalcitol: a review of its use in the management of secondary hyperparathyroidism.

Authors:  Dean M Robinson; Lesley J Scott
Journal:  Drugs       Date:  2005       Impact factor: 9.546

Review 4.  New Vitamin D analogues for osteodystrophy in chronic kidney disease.

Authors:  John Cunningham
Journal:  Pediatr Nephrol       Date:  2004-05-13       Impact factor: 3.714

  4 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.