| Literature DB >> 21647319 |
Luciana Gravellone1, Maria Antonietta Rizzo, Valentina Martina, Nicoletta Mezzina, Anna Regalia, Maurizio Gallieni.
Abstract
Vitamin D deficiency appears to be an underestimated risk factor for cardiovascular disease in patients with chronic kidney disease. Evidence from both basic science and clinical studies supports the possible protective role of vitamin D beyond its effect on mineral metabolism. Toxicity of pharmacologic doses of active vitamin D metabolites, in particular calcitriol, is mainly due to the possibility of positive calcium and phosphorus balance. Therefore, vitamin D analogs have been developed, which suppress PTH secretion and synthesis with reduced calcemic and phosphatemic effects. Observational studies suggest that in hemodialysis patients the use of a vitamin D receptor (VDR) activator, such as calcitriol, doxercalciferol, paricalcitol, or alfacalcidol, is associated with a reduced mortality when compared with nonusers of any VDR activator. In this article the existing literature on the topic is reviewed, although a more robust answer to the question of whether or not VDR activators have beneficial effects in hemodialysis patients will hopefully come from a randomized controlled trial.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21647319 PMCID: PMC3106992 DOI: 10.4061/2011/419524
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Nephrol
Vitamin D receptor activators: summary of clinical outcomes.
| Suppression of PTH |
| Incidence of hypercalcemia and hyperphosphatemia |
| Mineral metabolism and bone disorder |
| Hospitalization |
| Mortality |
| Cardiovascular protection |
| Prevention of Atheroscleroisis |
| Renal protection and reduction proteinuria |
| Renal protection and renin-angiotensin system |
| Renal protection and tubular interstitial fibrosis |
| Anti-inflammatory effect |
| Cellular senescence |
| Endothelial function |
Parathyroid hyperplasia.
| Author | Year | Study | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Okuno et al. [ | 2003 | At 4–24 weeks after administration of maxacalcitol, intact PTH concentrations decreased significantly in group S ( | |
| Shiizaki et al. [ | 2003 | PMIT and subsequent i.v. maxacalcitol administration significantly decreased PTH levels and parathyroid gland volume for at least 12 weeks. | |
| Akizawa and Kurokawa [ | 2002 | A trial on the long-term administration of maxacalcitol (3 times weekly for 26 weeks subsequent to a 26-week pretrial) in 124 dialysis patients with secondary hyperparathyroidism. | PTH levels fell promptly and significantly and were well controlled for one year. Serum calcium levels rose significantly, but within a physiological range. Hypercalcemia (33.1%) was resolved or ameliorated after the withdrawal or dose reduction of maxacalcitol. |
| Saito et al. [ | 2010 | An outpatient treatment regimen using percutaneous maxacalcitol injection therapy (PMIT) on a weekly basis for 4–6 weeks following dialysis. | Intact PTH decreased from 797 to 253 pg/mL. |
Suppression of PTH and effects on calcium and phosphate levels: paricalcitol versus placebo and paricalcitol versus calcitriol.
| Author | Year | Study | Outcome 1 | Outcome 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coyne et al. [ | 2006 | Three randomized, placebo-controlled, phase-3 trials were conducted in 220 patients with stage 3 and 4 CKD with secondary hyperparathyroidism. | Decreases in PTH levels of 30% or greater in 91% of paricalcitol versus 13% of placebo patients ( | Incidences of hypercalcemia, hyperphosphatemia, and elevated Ca × P were not significantly different between groups |
| Martin et al. [ | 1998 | 3 double-blind RCTs | 27 of 40 patients receiving paricalcitol (68%) had a 30% decrease in serum PTH for 4 consecutive weeks, versus 3 of 38 patients (8%) receiving placebo ( | No evidence of hypercalcemia and hyperphosphatemia |
| Lindberg et al. [ | 2001 | Open-label study | Mean PTH levels fell into target range (100–300 pg/mL) by month 5 | Serum calcium and phosphorus were in normal range |
| Sprague et al. [ | 2003 | Multicenter, double-blind RCT; | Paricalcitol patients had a | Hypercalcemic episodes were 18% for paricalcitol versus 33% for calcitriol ( |
| Mittman et al. [ | 2004 | Retrospective study | PTH levels were significantly lower for paricalcitol versus calcitriol (247 versus 190 pg/mL) | Number of hypercalcemic episodes were 111 for paricalcitol versus 69 for calcitriol; number of episodes of hyperphosphatemia were 225 for paricalcitol versus 186 for calcitriol |
| Coyne et al. [ | 2002 | Crossover study | Suppression of PTH at 36 hours was significantly greater after administration of 160 | Ca × P product increased more after calcitriol administration than after a 6- or 8-fold greater dose of paricalcitol |
| Lund et al. [ | 2010 | Single-center, double-blind, active-controlled, randomized, crossover trial. | Fractional intestinal calcium absorption was significantly lower after paricalcitol (0.135 ± 0.006) versus calcitriol (0.158 ± 0.006, | |
| Mittman et al. [ | 2010 | 2-year, single-center crossover study | Conversion from calcitriol to paricalcitol resulted in lower serum calcium ( | |
Suppression of PTH and effects on calcium and phosphate levels: doxercalciferol versus placebo and doxercalciferol versus paricalcitol.
| Author | Year | Study | Outcome 1 | Outcome 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Joist et al. [ | 2006 | Crossover study | Clinical suppression of PTH at 36 hours was comparable between treatment arms (63% following paricalcitol therapy and 65% following doxercalciferol therapy). | Serum phosphorus was significantly higher during administration of doxercalciferol (2.12 ± 0.11 mmol/L versus 1.85 ± 0.07 mmol/L). |
| Frazão et al. [ | 2000 | Double-blind, RCT | 80% of doxercalciferol patients showed a 70% reduction in PTH levels from baseline, and 83% of the doxercalciferol patients met the study PTH targets. | During double-blinded treatment, 3.26% and 0.46% of [Ca] measurements exceeded 11.2 mg/dl with doxercalciferol and placebo, respectively. |
| Coburn et al. [ | 2004 | RCT, | Mean plasma iPTH level decreased by 46% from baseline after 24 weeks of doxercalciferol treatment ( | No significant differences in mean serum calcium or phosphorus between the groups. |
| Zisman et al. [ | 2005 | RCT, | A conversion factor of 0.57 for the dose of doxercalciferol relative to paricalcitol resulted in equivalent suppression of iPTH | Incidences of hypercalcemia and hyperphosphatemia were similar for all groups |
Suppression of PTH and effects on calcium and phosphate levels: maxacalcitol versus placebo and maxacalcitol versus calcitriol.
| Author | Year | Study | Outcome 1 | Outcome 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hayashi et al. [ | 2004 | There were no significant differences between the two groups in serum iPTH | No significant differences between the two groups in phosphorus concentration. | |
| Shiizaki et al. [ | 2005 | Uremic (5/6 NX) rats fed a high-phosphate diet and treated by a direct injection of maxacalcitol-OCT (DI-OCT) or vehicle (DI-vehicle) | DI-OCT decreased PTH levels with a significant difference DI-OCT versus DI-vehicle. | Serum calcium and phosphorus levels did not changed markedly in both groups |
| Kazama et al. [ | 2005 | Both treatments decreased plasma intact PTH levels ( | Serum phosphate was significantly greater in the calcitriol group ( | |
| Oyama et al. [ | 2005 | Nondiabetic dialysis patients ( | 96 patients were successfully treated (iPTH levels < 300 pg/ml within 48 weeks). Pretreatment PTH and Ca levels were lower in patients successfully treated with maxacalcitol. | Serum phosphorus levels did not significantly increase. |
Mineral metabolism and bone disorder.
| Author | Year | Study | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Slatopolsky et al. [ | 2003 | A study in uremic rats to assess the efficacy of paricalcitol in prevention (protocol I) and treatment (protocol II) of hyperparathyroidism and renal osteodystrophy. | Paricalcitol was effective in preventing (protocol I) and suppressing (protocol II) the significant hyperparathyroidism induced by uremia and enhanced by a high phosphorus diet; it improved bone histology in uremic rats affected by severe secondary hyperparathyroidism. |
| Kazama et al. [ | 2005 | PTH, bone-specific alkaline phosphatase and osteocalcin levels were significantly lowered; serum calcium levels increased. Osteoprotegerin levels significantly decreased ( | |
Hospitalization and mortality.
| Author | Year | Study | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dobrez et al. [ | 2004 | Data from January 1999 to November 2001; | The paricalcitol group had a lower risk of first all-cause hospitalization (14% less, |
| Vervloet et al. [ | 2009 | A review of observational studies that examined the association between the use of VDRA and mortality | Hospitalization is less frequent in patients treated with paricalcitol versus patients treated with calcitriol |
| Teng et al. [ | 2003 | A historical cohort study to compare the 36-month survival rate among dialysis patients receiving treatment with paricalcitol (29,021 patients) versus calcitriol (38,378 patients). | The mortality rate among patients receiving paricalcitol was 0.180 per person-year versus 0.223 per person-year among those receiving calcitriol ( |
| Tentori et al. [ | 2006 | Mortality rates (deaths/100 patient-years) were identical in patients treated with doxercalciferol (15.4, 95% CI 13.6–17.1) and paricalcitol (15.3, 13.6–16.9) and higher in patients on calcitriol (19.6, 18.2–21.1) ( | |
Cardiovascular protection.
| Author | Year | Study | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bodyak et al. [ | 2007 | Study in Dahl salt-sensitive (DSS) rats to evaluate if paricalcitol is able to attenuate the development of left ventricular abnormalities | Compared with DSS rats fed a high-salt (HS) diet (6% NaCl for 6 weeks), DSS rats fed a high-salt HS receiving paricalcitol showed lower heart and lung weights, reduced LV mass, posterior wall thickness and end diastolic pressures, and increased fractional shortening. Blood pressures did not significantly differ between the groups |
| Xiang et al. [ | 2005 | VDR knockout (KO) mice were compared with wild-type (WT) mice | In VDRKO mice, the cardiac renin mRNA level was significantly increased, suggesting that the cardiac hypertrophy in VDRKO mice is a consequence of activation of both the systemic and cardiac RAS and that 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 regulates cardiac functions |
| Zhou et al. [ | 2008 | 25(OH)D 1alpha-hydroxylase KO mice were compared with WT mice to determine whether the cardiovascular effect of 1,25vitD is dependent on calcium or phosphorus. | Ablation of the 1alpha-hydroxylase gene in mice led to hypertension, cardiac hypertrophy, and systolic dysfunction, and this cardiac phenotype was rescued with exogenous 1,25vitD administration. 1,25vitD plays a protective role in the cardiovascular system by repressing the renin-angiotensin system independent of extracellular calcium or phosphorus. |
| Ongoing | RCT, oral paricalcitol compared to placebo in 220 predialysis patients (GFR 15–45 ml/min) affected by mild-to-moderate LVH and an LV ejection fraction >50% | Study ongoing | |
| Mizobuchi et al. [ | 2007 | Uremic rats (5/6 NX rats) were given calcitriol, paricalcitol, or doxercalciferol 3/week for 1 month | Calcitriol and doxercalciferol, but not paricalcitol, increased vascular calcification in uremic rats. The different effects of VDRA on vascular calcification are independent of an effect on Ca and P. Doxercalciferol significantly increased the Ca × P product and the aortic calcium content. A lower doxercalciferol did not increase the calcium-phosphate product but increased the aortic calcium content. |
Prevention of atherosclerosis.
| Author | Year | Study | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Husain et al. [ | 2010 | A study in atherosclerotic mice to investigate the protective effect of paricalcitol combined with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (enalapril) on aortic oxidative injury | ApoE-deficient mice developed hypertension which was prevented by enalapril or enalapril + paricalcitol treatment (not by paricalcitol alone). Atherosclerotic plaque in the aorta of ApoE-deficient mice was prevented by paricalcitol, enalapril, and paricalcitol + enalapril treatments |
Renal protection and reduction of proteinuria.
| Author | Year | Study | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Agarwal et al. [ | 2005 | Three RCTs in 220 CKD stage 3 and 4 patients randomized to oral paricalcitol ( | Decreased proteinuria in 29/57 (51%) of paricalcitol patients versus 15/61 (25%) placebo patients, |
| de Zeeuw et al. (VITAL study) [ | 2010 | Multinational RCT in 281 patients with type 2 diabetes and albuminuria receiving angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers were randomized to receive 24-week treatment with placebo, 1 | Patients on 2 |
| Fishbane et al. [ | 2009 | RCT of 61 patients with estimated glomerular filtration rate from 15 to 90 mL/min/1.73 m2 and protein excretion greater than 400 mg/24 h to receive paricalcitol, 1 mcg/day, or placebo. | Changes in protein excretion from baseline to last evaluation were +2.9% for controls and −17.6% for the paricalcitol group ( |
| Zhang et al. [ | 2008 | Study in streptozotocin- (STZ-) induced diabetes model mice | Treatment with losartan and paricalcitol completely prevented albuminuria, restored glomerular filtration barrier structure, and markedly reduced glomerulosclerosis, effectively preventing renal injury in diabetic nephropathy |
Renal protection and inhibition of the rennin-angiotensin system.
| Author | Year | Study | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Freundlich et al. [ | 2008 | Study in remnant kidney model of chronic renal failure (5/6 nephrectomy) mice, administrating two different doses of paricalcitol thrice weekly for 8 weeks. | Paricalcitol was found to decrease angiotensinogen, renin, renin receptor, and vascular endothelial growth factor mRNA levels in the remnant kidney by 30–50% compared to untreated animals. |
| Bodyak et al. [ | 2007 | Study in Dahl salt-sensitive (DSS) rats. Evaluation of the ability of paricalcitol to attenuate the development of LV abnormalities. | Paricalcitol significantly reduced cardiac renin expression in DSS rats |
Renal protection and reduction of tubular interstitial fibrosis.
| Author | Year | Study | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tan et al. [ | 2006 | Study of the effects of paricalcitol in a mouse model of obstructive nephropathy | Paricalcitol reduced infiltration of T cells and macrophages in the obstructed kidney and this inhibition of inflammatory cell infiltration was accompanied by a decreased expression of inflammatory cytokines. Paricalcitol attenuates renal tubulo-interstitial fibrosis in this animal model of renal obstructive damage. |
| Wang et al. [ | 2011 | Study in mice with diet-induced obesity, treated with doxercalciferol. | Doxercalciferol decreased proteinuria, podocyte injury, mesangial expansion, extracellular matrix protein accumulation, macrophage infiltration, oxidative stress, proinflammatory cytokines, and profibrotic growth factor. In addition, it prevented the activation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system. VDR activation also decreased the accumulation of neutral lipids (triglycerides and cholesterol) and the expression of enzymes that mediate fatty acid and cholesterol synthesis. |
Anti-inflammatory action.
| Author | Year | Study | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alborzi et al. [ | 2008 | A pilot trial in 24 patients randomized to 3 groups to receive 0, 1, or 2 mcg of paricalcitol orally for 1 month. | At 1 month, the treatment/baseline ratio of high sensitivity C-reactive protein was 1.5 (95% CI: 1.1 to 2.1; |
| Eleftheriadis et al. [ | 2010 | A study in 10 healthy volunteers; peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were cultured for 48 hours in presence or not of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and in the presence or not of paricalcitol. TNF-alpha and IL-8 produced by PBMC were measured. | Basal TNF-alpha concentration and IL-8 concentrations were reduced by paricalcitol. Paricalcitol also blunted the TNF-alpha concentration increase induced by LPS. Paricalcitol reduced to its basal level the IL-8 concentration increase by LPS. The in vitro inhibition of TGF-alpha and IL-8 by paricalcitol confirms the immunomodulatory properties of this vitamin D analogue. |
Endothelial function.
| Author | Year | Study | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wu-Wong et al. [ | 2010 | Study in uremic rats (5/6 NX rats), treated for two weeks with paricalcitol. | Uremia impaired aortic relaxation was improved by paricalcitol in a dose-dependent manner, independent of serum PTH levels or blood pressure. PTH suppression alone did not improve endothelial function since in a separate experiment cinacalcet suppressed PTH without affecting endothelial-dependent vasorelaxation. |
| Karavalakis et al. [ | 2008 | Uremic (5/6 NX) rats treated with paricalcitol (0.2 mcg/kg, thrice weekly) for 12 weeks. Aortic histology was studied | Paricalcitol treatment showed both benefits and harmful effects: vasoconstriction was reduced but calcification increased. Plasma phosphate was increased, 2.1- to 2.5-fold higher than normal. |