Literature DB >> 25060056

Ferric citrate controls phosphorus and delivers iron in patients on dialysis.

Julia B Lewis1, Mohammed Sika2, Mark J Koury3, Peale Chuang4, Gerald Schulman2, Mark T Smith5, Frederick C Whittier6, Douglas R Linfert7, Claude M Galphin8, Balaji P Athreya9, A Kaldun Kaldun Nossuli10, Ingrid J Chang11, Samuel S Blumenthal12, John Manley13, Steven Zeig14, Kotagal S Kant15, Juan Jose Olivero16, Tom Greene17, Jamie P Dwyer2.   

Abstract

Patients on dialysis require phosphorus binders to prevent hyperphosphatemia and are iron deficient. We studied ferric citrate as a phosphorus binder and iron source. In this sequential, randomized trial, 441 subjects on dialysis were randomized to ferric citrate or active control in a 52-week active control period followed by a 4-week placebo control period, in which subjects on ferric citrate who completed the active control period were rerandomized to ferric citrate or placebo. The primary analysis compared the mean change in phosphorus between ferric citrate and placebo during the placebo control period. A sequential gatekeeping strategy controlled study-wise type 1 error for serum ferritin, transferrin saturation, and intravenous iron and erythropoietin-stimulating agent usage as prespecified secondary outcomes in the active control period. Ferric citrate controlled phosphorus compared with placebo, with a mean treatment difference of -2.2±0.2 mg/dl (mean±SEM) (P<0.001). Active control period phosphorus was similar between ferric citrate and active control, with comparable safety profiles. Subjects on ferric citrate achieved higher mean iron parameters (ferritin=899±488 ng/ml [mean±SD]; transferrin saturation=39%±17%) versus subjects on active control (ferritin=628±367 ng/ml [mean±SD]; transferrin saturation=30%±12%; P<0.001 for both). Subjects on ferric citrate received less intravenous elemental iron (median=12.95 mg/wk ferric citrate; 26.88 mg/wk active control; P<0.001) and less erythropoietin-stimulating agent (median epoetin-equivalent units per week: 5306 units/wk ferric citrate; 6951 units/wk active control; P=0.04). Hemoglobin levels were statistically higher on ferric citrate. Thus, ferric citrate is an efficacious and safe phosphate binder that increases iron stores and reduces intravenous iron and erythropoietin-stimulating agent use while maintaining hemoglobin.
Copyright © 2015 by the American Society of Nephrology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  anemia; clinical trial; dialysis; phosphate binders

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25060056      PMCID: PMC4310662          DOI: 10.1681/ASN.2014020212

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Soc Nephrol        ISSN: 1046-6673            Impact factor:   10.121


  26 in total

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5.  Rationale and study design of a three-period, 58-week trial of ferric citrate as a phosphate binder in patients with ESRD on dialysis.

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10.  Dose-response and efficacy of ferric citrate to treat hyperphosphatemia in hemodialysis patients: a short-term randomized trial.

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