| Literature DB >> 24327730 |
Abstract
Endothelial dysfunction underlies multiple cardiovascular consequences of chronic kidney disease (CKD) and antecedent diabetes or hypertension. Endothelial insults in CKD or end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients include uremic toxins, serum uric acid, hyperphosphatemia, reactive oxygen species, and advanced glycation endproducts (AGEs). Sevelamer carbonate, a calcium-free intestinally nonabsorbed polymer, is approved for hyperphosphatemic dialysis patients in the US and hyperphosphatemic stage 3-5 CKD patients in many other countries. Sevelamer has been observed investigationally to reduce absorption of AGEs, bacterial toxins, and bile acids, suggesting that it may reduce inflammatory, oxidative, and atherogenic stimuli in addition to its on-label action of lowering serum phosphate. Some studies also suggest that noncalcium binders may contribute less to vascular calcification than calcium-based binders. Exploratory sevelamer carbonate use in patients with stages 2-4 diabetic CKD significantly reduced HbA1c, AGEs, fibroblast growth factor (FGF)-23, and total and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol versus calcium carbonate; inflammatory markers decreased and defenses against AGEs increased. Sevelamer has also been observed to reduce circulating FGF-23, potentially reducing risk of left ventricular hypertrophy. Sevelamer but not calcium-based binders in exploratory studies increases flow-mediated vasodilation, a marker of improved endothelial function, in patients with CKD. In contrast, lanthanum carbonate and calcium carbonate effects on FMV did not differ in hemodialysis recipients. The recent independent-CKD randomized trial compared sevelamer versus calcium carbonate in predialysis CKD patients (investigational in the US, on-label in European participants); sevelamer reduced 36-month mortality and the composite endpoint of mortality or dialysis inception. Similarly, independent-HD in incident dialysis patients showed improved survival with 24 months of sevelamer versus calcium-based binders. This review discusses recent exploratory evidence for pleiotropic effects of sevelamer on endothelial function in CKD or ESRD. Endothelial effects of sevelamer may contribute mechanistically to the improved survival observed in some studies of CKD and ESRD patients.Entities:
Keywords: advanced glycation endproducts; atherosclerosis; fetuin-A; fibroblast growth factor-23; sevelamer; vascular dysfunction
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24327730 PMCID: PMC3917706 DOI: 10.1177/1753944713513061
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Adv Cardiovasc Dis ISSN: 1753-9447
Figure 1.Increased cardiovascular mortality risk associated with Stage 5 CKD versus the general population. Reproduced with kind permission from Elsevier (Foley ).
Figure 2.Structure of sevelamer.
a, b = number of primary amine groups, a + b = 9
c = number of crosslinking groups, c = 1
m = large number to indicate extended polymer network
Figure 3.Summary of proposed phosphate-reducing and phosphate-independent effects of sevelamer.
Effects of sevelamer on vascular calcification in patients with CKD requiring or not requiring dialysis.
| Stage of CKD | Studies and references | Populations and regimens | Key results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dialysis recipients | Treat to Goal Study [ | Hemodialysis patients, | Significantly less median % changes from baseline with sevelamer than calcium in CACS (6% |
| Subanalysis of Treat to Goal Study [ | Hemodialysis patients, | No significant changes from baseline in EBCT calcification with sevelamer; calcium acetate significantly increased calcification scores at coronary arteries (mean +182 ± 350, median +20, | |
| [ | Adults on hemodialysis, | Sevelamer patients did not experience increases in EBCT calcification. CaCO3 patients had significant median increases from baseline in aortic (+32%, | |
| [ | Adults on hemodialysis, | CaCO3 patients had significantly worse median increases in EBCT calcification scores than sevelamer patients at the coronary artery (CaCO3 484, | |
| [ | New adult hemodialysis patients, | Calcium recipients had more rapid and severe increases in EBCT CACS than sevelamer recipients ( | |
| [ | Cross-sectional study of maintenance hemodialysis patients ( | CACS was significantly lower with sevelamer than calcium (283 ± 83 | |
| [ | Adults on hemodialysis, | Sevelamer recipients had 112.3 points less CACS increase from baseline than calcium recipients ( | |
| Patients with CKD stages 3–5 not requiring dialysis | [ | Predialysis CKD patients ( | Sevelamer left TCS unchanged from baseline to final visit (415 ± 153 |
| INDEPENDENT-CKD study [ | Consecutive CKD stage 3–4 outpatients ( | Among patients with baseline CACS > 0, 24 sevelamer patients and 2 calcium patients had significant CAC regression. | |
| PNT study [ | Adults with CKD (MDRD eGFR 20–45 ml/min/1.73 m2), randomized to receive placebo, sevelamer carbonate, lanthanum carbonate, or calcium acetate for median follow up of 249 days; n = 98 scanned for coronary and abdominal aortic calcification | No patients with zero baseline calcium scores experienced increased calcification during treatment. Among the 81 patients with nonzero baseline calcification scores, binder recipients experienced significant increases in median annualized percent change of coronary and abdominal-aortic calcification |
CACS, coronary artery calcium score; CI, confidence interval; CKD, chronic kidney disease; EBCT, electron beam computed tomography; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate; MDRD, Modification of Diet in Renal Disease equation; PNT, Phosphate to Normal Treatment; TCS, total calcium score.
Figure 4.Effects of sevelamer versus calcium on mortality in patients new to hemodialysis. Adapted with kind permission from Macmillan Publishers Ltd. (Block ).
Summary of pleiotropic effects of sevelamer versus calcium-based binders (additional to lowering of serum phosphate and attenuation of vascular calcification) on multiple parameters affecting cardiovascular risk in CKD/ESRD.
| Parameter | Studies and references | Populations and regimens | Key results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Increased bone formation and improved architecture | [ | Mouse model of diabetic CKD with vascular calcification and metabolic syndrome, treated with sevelamer carbonate | Sevelamer reduced CKD-induced trabecular osteopenia, increased tibial and femoral osteoblast surfaces, osteoid volumes and bone formation rates. |
| [ | Adults on hemodialysis, | Sevelamer patients had a significant increase in median trabecular bone density by CT whereas CaCO3 patients had a significant decrease (sevelamer +3%, | |
| [ | Adults on hemodialysis, | Sevelamer but not CaCO3 patients had significantly increased bone formation rates from baseline ( | |
| [ | Taiwanese adults on hemodialysis, | Alkaline phosphatase (AP) was significantly increased from baseline to week 8 with sevelamer but not calcium ( | |
| Subanalysis of Treat to Goal study [ | Hemodialysis patients, | Calcium patients experienced unexpected significant decreases in vertebral trabecular QCT BMD (30% of calcium recipients experienced a ≥10% trabecular | |
| Improved vascular or endothelial function | [ | Dialysis patients ( | PWV increased by 45 ± 16 cm/s per month during CaCO3 use; the 6 months of sevelamer use arrested PWV increase, showing PWV decrease of −20 cm/s per month. |
| [ | Nondiabetic hyperphosphatemic stage 4 CKD patients ( | CKD patients had significantly lower baseline serum fetuin-A and FMD and higher hsCRP than controls. Sevelamer significantly increased median fetuin-A (0.27 to 0.35 g/l, | |
| [ | 57 dialysis patients receiving 3 successive 8-week treatments: calcium acetate-sevelamer hydrochloride-calcium acetate | Serum fetuin-A significantly increased by 21% during sevelamer use, and remained elevated during the subsequent calcium period | |
| [ | Hyperphosphatemic stage 4 CKD patients ( | Sevelamer increased FMV from 6.1% to 7.1% ( | |
| Anti-inflammatory, anti-endotoxin, or anti-dyslipidemic effects | [ | 108 hemodialysis patients randomized to sevelamer hydrochloride or calcium acetate for 1 year | Sevelamer significantly decreased beta2-microglobulin ( |
| [ | 36 hyperphosphatemic hemodialysis patients receiving sevelamer for 24 weeks | Sevelamer lowered hsCRP significantly from baseline to 12 and 24 weeks (1.03 | |
| [ | 50 nondiabetic hyperphosphatemic stage 4 CKD patients and 36 matched healthy volunteers randomized to receive sevelamer hydrochloride or calcium acetate for 8 weeks | Sevelamer significantly decreased LDL cholesterol from baseline (113.5 ± 16.0 mg/dl to 103.7 ± 17.0, | |
| [ | Cross-sectional Nutritional and Inflammatory Evaluation of Dialysis (NIED) study of 787 adults on hemodialysis receiving sevelamer hydrochloride, calcium, or both | Sevelamer patients were more likely to have CRP <10 mg/dl than calcium patients (OR 1.06, 95% CI 1.02–1.11), independent of age, dialysis vintage, body mass index or statin use. | |
| [ | Pilot cross-sectional study in 46 hemodialysis patients (65% sevelamer hydrochloride users) | Sevelamer users had lower mean plasma endotoxin than nonusers (0.23 ± 0.01 | |
| [ | Hemodialysis patients who switched from calcium to 6 months of sevelamer hydrochloride | Plasma endotoxin and hsCRP significantly decreased from baseline to 6 months on sevelamer. | |
| INDEPEN-DENT-CKD study [ | Nonblinded pilot study in 239 predialysis CKD patients randomized to sevelamer or calcium for 3 years | Sevelamer significantly lowered mean total cholesterol (from 165 to 146 mg/dl, | |
| [ | Open-label crossover study in 84 hemodialysis patients randomized to sevelamer hydrochloride or calcium acetate for 8 weeks, 2-week washout, then 8 weeks on the other agent | Sevelamer use decreased LDL cholesterol by 24%. Calcium use did not affect lipids. | |
| [ | Sevelamer bound bile acids cooperatively at low binding densities; saturating density reduced binding capacity only by half; oleic acid enhanced bile acid binding and retention. | ||
| [ | 51 hemodialysis patients randomized to sevelamer hydrochloride or calcium acetate for 34 weeks | Sevelamer reduced total cholesterol by 16.5%, LDL cholesterol by 29.9%, and increased HDL cholesterol by 19.5% ( | |
| [ | Adults on peritoneal dialysis, | Sevelamer significantly decreased total and LDL cholesterol and uric acid and increased bone-specific alkaline phosphatase from baseline ( | |
| [ | Children with stage 3–4 CKD ( | Sevelamer significantly lowered total and LDL cholesterol by week 12 ( | |
| Cross-sectional study nested in SUMMER trial [ | Adults on maintenance hemodialysis (45 exposed to sevelamer hydrochloride and 130 not) | Sevelamer-exposed patients had significantly less carotid intima-media thickness and lower LDL cholesterol than unexposed patients. | |
| [ | Taiwanese adults on hemodialysis, | Total and LDL cholesterol decreased significantly from baseline in the sevelamer group; changes were correlated with decreases of serum PO4 on treatment ( | |
| Reduced glycoxidative stress (Suppres-sion of advanced glycation end product accumulation or reduction of oxidative stress biomarkers) | [ | Adults on hemodialysis, | Plasma pentosidine increased from baseline with calcium but not with sevelamer ( |
| [ | Crossover study of adults with stage 2–4 diabetic CKD receiving sevelamer carbonate or calcium carbonate (crossover, 2 months on each with 1-week washout between) | Sevelamer significantly lowered serum Hb1Ac and glucose, serum and intracellular carboxymethyllysine and methylglyoxal, increased AGE receptor and sirtuin 1 mRNA, and decreased TNF-α and 8-isoprostanes. | |
| [ | Adults on hemodialysis, | Serum AGEs (methylglyoxal and carboxymethyllysine) were reduced from baseline with 4.6 or 7.2 g/day sevelamer carbonate but remained similar to baseline on 2.4 g/day sevelamer carbonate. | |
| Antihyperuricemic | Subanalysis of Treat to Goal study [ | Adults on hemodialysis, | Mean serum uric acid decreased more from baseline with sevelamer than calcium (−0.64 |
| [ | Adults on peritoneal dialysis, | Sevelamer significantly decreased serum uric acid from baseline (−0.53 ± 0.79, | |
| [ | Japanese adults on hemodialysis, | Sevelamer lowered serum uric acid only in patients with baseline hyperuricemia. Rates of uric acid change were correlated with rates of phosphate reduction. | |
| [ | Taiwanese adults on hemodialysis, | Sevelamer significantly decreased serum uric acid; ( | |
| Reduced circulating FGF-23 | [ | Brazilian adults on hemodialysis, | Serum FGF-23 decreased significantly from baseline in sevelamer recipients ( |
| [ | Adults with CKD stages 3–4, | Sevelamer decreased serum FGF-23 from baseline significantly more than calcium did (changes: −53.6 ± 64.7 | |
| [ | Adults with CKD (MDRD eGFR 20–45 ml/min/1.73 m2), | Serum |
AGE, advanced glycation endproduct; BSA, bovine serum albumin; CAC(S), coronary artery calcification (score); CI, confidence interval; CKD, chronic kidney disease; CT, computed tomography; EBCT, electron beam computed tomography; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate; FGF-23, fibroblast growth factor-23; FMV, flow-mediated vasodilation; HDL, high-density lipoprotein; hsCRP, high-sensitivity C-reactive protein; LDL, low-density lipoprotein; MDRD, Modification of Diet in Renal Disease equation; OR, odds ratio; PTH, parathyroid hormone; PWV, pulse wave velocity; QCT, quantitative computed tomography; TCS, total calcium score.
Figure 5.Potential pleiotropic effects of sevelamer affecting parameters involved in the inflammatory, metabolic, or developmental modulation of vascular calcification. Factors that have been shown to respond to sevelamer are shown in yellow ovals. Adapted with kind permission from Macmillan Publishers Ltd. (Sage ).
ALP, alkaline phosphatase; BMP, bone morphogenetic protein; FGF-23, fibroblast growth factor-23; HDL, high-density lipoprotein; IFN-γ, interferon gamma; IGF-1, insulin-like growth factor-1; IL-6, interleukin-6; MGP, matrix GLA protein; MMP, matrix metalloproteinase; Pi, inorganic phosphate; PTH, parathyroid hormone; TNF, tumor necrosis factor.
Recruiting, ongoing, recently completed (unpublished), and planned studies of sevelamer pleiotropic effects from the US ClinicalTrials.gov database.
| ClinicalTrials.gov identifier | Title | Form of Sevelamer | Patient Population | Institution or Society | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT01238588 | The Effect(s) of Sevelamer Carbonate (Renvela) on Atherosclerotic Plaque Inflammation Judged by FDG-PET Scan | Carbonate | ESRD patients on maintenance HD for ≥6 months | Brigham & Women’s Hospital, Boston, MA, USA | Unknown |
| NCT00364000 | Arterial Stiffness and Calcifications in Haemodialysis Patients on Sevelamer or Calcium Acetate | Hydrochloride | ESRD patients on maintenance HD for ≥3 months | Romanian Society of Nephrology | Not yet recruiting |
| NCT01277497 | Effect of Phosphate Binders on Markers of Vascular Health in Chronic Kidney Disease Stages 3 and 4 | Carbonate | Adults with CKD stages 3–4 on a stable angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor or angiotensin receptor blocker regimen for 30 days before enrollment | Albany College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences, Albany Medical College, Albany, NY, USA | Recruiting |
| NCT01220843 | FGF23 Reduction : Efficacy of a New Phosphate Binder in CHronic Kidney Disease (FRENCH) | Carbonate | CKD patients not on dialysis stage 3b or 4 | Centre Hospitalier Universitaire, Ami-ens, France | Completed |
| NCT01308242 | Effects of a Non-Calcium Based Phosphate Binder on FGF23 Levels in Chronic Kidney Disease | Carbonate | Adults with MDRD eGFR ≤50 ml/min/1.73 m2 | Penn State University, Hershey, PA, USA | Unknown |
| NCT01191762 | Sevelamer and Secondary Hyperparathyroidism in Chronic Kidney Disease | Carbonate | Adults with MDRD eGFR <60 ml/min/1.73 m2 | Stratton Veterans’ Affairs Medical Center, Albany, NY, USA | Completed |
| NCT01543958 | Sevelamer for Reducing Endotoxemia and Immune Activation | Carbonate | Adults with HIV infection | Multiple institutions with National Institutes of Health sponsorship, USA | Completed |
| NCT01493050 | The Effects of Sevelamer Carbonate on Diabetic Nephropathy | Carbonate | Adults with diabetes and proteinuric CKD stages 2–4 | Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY | Pilot study published; [ |
CKD, chronic kidney disease; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate; ESRD, end-stage renal disease; FDG-PET, fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography; FGF-23, fibroblast growth factor-23; HD, hemodialysis; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; MDRD, Modification of Diet in Renal Disease equation.