| Literature DB >> 17910755 |
Rebecca J Schmidt1, Cheryl L Dalton.
Abstract
Anemia is an underrecognized but characteristic feature of chronic kidney disease (CKD), associated with significant cardiovascular morbidity, hospitalization, and mortality. Since their inception nearly two decades ago, erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs) have revolutionized the care of patients with renal anemia, and their use has been associated with improved quality of life and reduced hospitalizations, inpatient costs, and mortality. Hemoglobin targets >/=13 g/dL have been linked with adverse events in recent randomized trials, raising concerns over the proper hemoglobin range for ESA treatment. This review appraises observational and randomized studies of the outcomes of erythropoietic treatment and offers recommendations for managing renal anemia in the primary care setting.Entities:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17910755 PMCID: PMC2147011 DOI: 10.1186/1750-4732-1-14
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Osteopath Med Prim Care ISSN: 1750-4732
Figure 1Prevalence of anemia severity stratified by stage of chronic kidney disease. Adapted from McClellan et al., 2004 [3].
Figure 2The cardiorenal anemia syndrome. Congestive heart failure (CHF) is a cause and consequence of CKD. First, CHF inflames the heart, liver, and vasculature, creating an influx of circulating cytokines that depress erythropoiesis and perturb iron metabolism [44]. Second, CHF directly induces kidney damage, in which GFR can deteriorate by as much as one mL/min/month [45–47]. In response to reduced cardiac output, blood pressure (and renal perfusion) is maintained by activation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system. Angiotensin II-mediated renal vasoconstriction and increased metabolic demands of the kidney result in renal ischemia and ultimately tubular cell death [1]. Renal cell death in turn hastens anemia through loss of endocrine function. In addition, aldosterone-induced salt and water retention leads to an increased pre-load on the heart, which increases its rate in an attempt to increase output.
Effects of subcutaneous titrated dosages of erythropoietin on cardiovascular endpoints in patients with CKD not on dialysis
| Ayus et al. [54] (uncontrolled) | CrCl 10–30 mL/min (diabetic) or 20–40 mL/min (nondiabetic); 6 mo | 40 (Hb <10 g/dL) | EPO to 12 g/dL | Change-from-baseline LVMI | In anemic pts, LVMI decreased vs baseline (142 vs 157 g/m2; |
| 61 (Hb>10 g/dL) | Standard care | ||||
| CREATE study [61] (r) | GFR 15–35 mL/min/1.73 m2, Hb 11.0–12.5 g/dL;3 yrs | 300 | EPO to 13–15 g/dL | Composite of 8 cardiovascular events (primary), LVMI (secondary) | Baseline LVMI: |
| 300 | EPO to 10.5–11.5 g/dL | ||||
| Levin et al. [56] (r) | 24 mo | 78 | Early EPO to Hb 12–14 g/dL | Mean change-from-baseline LVMI | Mean LVMI change from baseline: |
| 58 | Deferred EPO to 9.0–10.5 g/dL | ||||
| Roger et al. [57] (r, mc, uncontrolled) | CrCl 15–50 mL/min, Hb 11.0–12.0 g/dL (in women) and 11–13 g/dL (in men);2 yr or until dialysis | 75 | EPO to Hb 12–13 g/dL | Mean change-from baseline LVMI | No statistically significant between group changes in LVMI over 2 years. |
| 80 | EPO to Hb 9–10 g/dL | ||||
| Mancini et al. [77] (r) | SrCr<2.5 mg/dL, NYHA functional class III-IV, Hct<35%;3 mo | 15 | EPO 15 000–30 000/wk | Blood and exercise parameters | Changes from baseline: |
| 8 | Placebo | ||||
| Silverberg et al. [45] (retrospective) | Mean NYHA 3.66, SrCr 2.6 mg/dL, Hct 30%, Hb | 26 | EPO + IV iron to Hb 12 g/dL | NYHA functional status, LVEF, healthcare utilization | Changes from baseline: |
| Silverberg et al. [47] (r) | NYHA class III-IV, LVEF ≤40%, Hb 10–11.5 g/dL, 50% with CKD; 8.2 mo | 16 | EPO + IV iron to Hb ≥12.5 g/dL | NYHA functional status, LVEF, furosemide requirements, healthcare utilization | Changes from baseline: |
| 16 | Standard care | ||||
| Silverberg et al. [46] (nr) | NIDDM or no NIDDM plus severe CHF, GFR decline >1 mL/min/mo; 11.8 mo | 84 (NIDDM) | EPO to Hb 12.5 g/dL + IV iron PRN | NYHA functional class; VAS for fatigue and breathlessness; LVEF | Changes from baseline: |
| 95 (no NIDDM) | |||||
| Silverberg et al. [78] (nc) | Symptomatic CHF despite optimal therapies, Hb<12 g/dL,91% had CKD (CrCl <60 mL/Min);20.7 mo | 78 | EPO + PRN IV iron to Hb 13 g/dL | NYHA functional class, LVEF, healthcare utilization | Changes from baseline: (all |
CrCl = creatinine clearance; db = double-blind; EPO = epoetin; GFR = glomerular filtration rate; Hct = hematocrit; IV = intravenous; LOHS = length of hospital stay; LVEF = left ventricular ejection fraction; LVMI = left ventricular mass index; mc = multicenter; mo = months; nc = noncomparative; NYHA = New York Heart Association; PLA = placebo; PRN = as required; pts = patients; r = randomized; SrCr = serum creatinine; VAS = visual-analog scale; wk = week.
Effects of subcutaneous titrated dosages of erythropoietin in patients not on dialysis on progression to renal replacement therapy
| Dean et al. [55] (retrospective) | eGFR 30–59 mL/min/1.73 m2 (n = 71) | 122 Only pts with ≥8 EPO doses included | EPO (Hb targets, doses not specified | Change in least-squares slope of inverse serum creatinine clearance vs time before and after EPO | Baseline eGFR 30–59 ml/min/1.73 m2: |
| CREATE study [61] (r) | eGFR 15–35 mL/min/1.73 m2, Hb 11.0–12.5 g/dL;3 yrs | 300 | EPO to 13–15 g/dL | Time to dialysis (secondary) eGFR also assessed | Change of mean eGFR from baseline: |
| 300 | EPO to 10.5–11.5 g/dL | ||||
| Gouva et al. [58] (r, mc) | SrCr 2–6 mg/dL (eGFR not given), Hb 9.0–11.6 g/dL;22.5 mo | 45 | Early EPO to Hb≥3 g/dL | Composite of doubling of baseline SrCr, renal replacement or death | Composite endpoint: Early EPO pts, 29% Deferred EPO pts, 53%; |
| 43 | Deferred EPO when Hb<9.0 g/dL | ||||
| Jungers et al. [59] (c-cs) | Predialysis (CrCl ≤15 mL/min) pts (eGFR not given); 24 mo | 20 (Hb<10 g/dL) | EPO to 11.5 g/dL | Change-from-baseline rate of decline in creatinine clearance, time to dialysis | Rate of change in creatinine clearance, mL/min/1.73 m2/month: EPO group: |
| 43 (Hb>10 g/dL) | Standard care | ||||
| Kuriyama et al. [79] (r) | SrCr 2–4 mg/dL (eGFR not given), Hematocrit<30%;28 mo median follow-up | 31 | Standard care | Doubling of baseline SrCr | Doubling of baseline SrCr |
| 42 | EPO to Hct 33–35% | ||||
| SrCr 2–4 mg/dL, Hematocrit>30%;28 mo median follow-up | 35 | Nonanemic control | |||
| Rossert et al. [66] (r, mc, uncontrolled)a | Iothalamate GFR 25–60 mL/min; 40 mo | 108 | EPO for Hb 14–15 g/dL (men) and 13–14 g/dL (women) | Change-from-baseline GFR as estimated by iohexol clearance | GFR change: |
| 133 | PRN EPO for Hb 11–12 g/dL | ||||
| Silverberg et al. [46] (nr) | Cockcroft-Gault eGFR decline >1 mL/min per mo; 11.8 mo | 84 (NIDDM) | EPO to Hb 12.5 g/dL + IV Iron PRN | SrCr and CrCl (secondary endpoints) | GFR decline halted in both groups |
| 95 (no NIDDM) |
a Because of labeling changes for EPO, this study terminated after 7.4 and 8.3 months of maintenance in the high and low Hb group, respectively.
c-cs = case-control study; CHF = congestive heart failure;CrCl = creatinine clearance; db = double-blind; EPO = epoetin; (e)GFR = (estimated) glomerular filtration rate; Hct = hematocrit; mc = multicenter; IV = intravenous; mo = months; NIDDM = noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus; nr = nonrandomized; PLA = placebo; PRN = as required; pts = patients; r = randomized; SrCr = serum creatinine; wks = weeks.
Management of anemia in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) [16, 29]
| Screening | Patients with CKD should be evaluated for the presence of anemia once GFR reaches 60 mL/min. Kidney function (and Hb level) should be assessed in all patients with cardiovascular disease and diabetes. |
| Hb | Determines severity of anemia. Hb is a more reliable surrogate marker than hematocrit. Dosages of erythropoietic agents are titrated to the absolute Hb value, taking into account the relative increase from the last dosage. |
| Complete blood count (MCH, MCV, MCHC, white blood cell count, platelet count) | Information on: potential folate and vitamin B12 deficiency (high MCV indicative of macrocytosis); iron deficiency (low MCH indicative of hypochromia); and capacity of bone marrow function. |
| Absolute reticulocyte count | Determination of proliferative activity |
| Serum ferritin | Assessment of iron storage reserves (target, 200 ng/mL). There is little evidence to suggest treating patients with levels >500 ng/mL is worthwhile. |
| TSAT or Hb content in reticulocytes | Iron balance and distribution (TSAT target > 20%). |
| Target risk factors | Progression of CKD can be delayed by tight control of blood pressure, blood glucose, and proteinuria. |
| Stimulants of erythropoiesis | Recommended in anemic patients to maintain Hb levels between 11.0 g/dL and 12.0 g/dL. Monthly follow-up is required to ensure the regimen does not raise Hb >12 g/dL and/or induce hypertension. |
| Iron | Oral iron preparations (FeSO4, Niferex, Proferrin, etc.) may be sufficient to raise iron stores, though monthly IV iron supplementation may be required to ensure optimal erythropoiesis in patients with iron-deficiency anemia. Iron gluconate or iron sucrose are safer than iron dextran, which has been associated with anaphylaxis. Emerging IV iron agents are designed to minimize free iron and oxidative stress; an emerging oral iron agent utilizes the heme iron receptor in the gut for enhanced absorption. |
| Nutritional supplements | Oral supplementation of folate, pyridoxine and vitamin B12 (and other vitamins) is a rational choice in malnourished patients. |
| Androgens | Not recommended. |
MCH = mean corpuscular hemoglobin; MCV = mean corpuscular volume; MCHC = mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration, Hb = hemoglobin; TSAT = serum transferrin saturation.