| Literature DB >> 27916890 |
Sheldon C Leong1, Tammy L Sirich2.
Abstract
Indoxyl sulfate is an extensively studied uremic solute. It is a small molecule that is more than 90% bound to plasma proteins. Indoxyl sulfate is derived from the breakdown of tryptophan by colon microbes. The kidneys achieve high clearances of indoxyl sulfate by tubular secretion, a function not replicated by hemodialysis. Clearance by hemodialysis is limited by protein binding since only the free, unbound solute can diffuse across the membrane. Since the dialytic clearance is much lower than the kidney clearance, indoxyl sulfate accumulates to relatively high plasma levels in hemodialysis patients. Indoxyl sulfate has been most frequently implicated as a contributor to renal disease progression and vascular disease. Studies have suggested that indoxyl sulfate also has adverse effects on bones and the central nervous system. The majority of studies have assessed toxicity in cultured cells and animal models. The toxicity in humans has not yet been proven, as most data have been from association studies. Such toxicity data, albeit inconclusive, have prompted efforts to lower the plasma levels of indoxyl sulfate through dialytic and non-dialytic means. The largest randomized trial showed no benefit in renal disease progression with AST-120. No trials have yet tested cardiovascular or mortality benefit. Without such trials, the toxicity of indoxyl sulfate cannot be firmly established.Entities:
Keywords: dialysis; indoxyl sulfate; uremia
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27916890 PMCID: PMC5198552 DOI: 10.3390/toxins8120358
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Summary of clinical association studies.
| Outcome Studied | Study | Types of Patients | Number of Patients | Indoxyl Sulfate Form | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Progression | Wu et al. [ | CKD Stage 1 to 4 | 268 | Total Level | Association with progression (defined by 50% eGFR reduction or dialysis) * |
| Lin et al. [ | CKD Stage 3 to 5 | 70 | Total Level | Association with progression (defined as dialysis) | |
| CV | Sato et al. [ | Avg. eGFR 60 mL/min/1.73 m2 | 204 | Total Level | Association with left ventricular dysfunction |
| Shimazu et al. [ | CKD Stage 1 to 3 | 76 | Total Level | Association with hospitalization for heart failure and cardiac death | |
| Hsu et al. [ | Avg. eGFR 66 mL/min/1.73 m2 | 191 | Total Level | Association with coronary atherosclerosis | |
| Tsai et al. [ | Avg. eGFR 79 mL/min/1.73 m2 | 214 | Free Level | Association with cardiac stent restenosis | |
| Barreto et al. [ | CKD Stage 2 to dialysis | 139 | Total Level | Association with aortic calcification; | |
| Lin et al. [ | CKD Stage 3 to 5 | 70 | Total Level | Association with CV event; | |
| Melamed et al. [ | Incident HD | 521 | Total Level | Association with all-cause mortality; | |
| Shafi et al. [ | Incident HD | 394 | Free Level | No association with CV event; | |
| Lin et al. [ | Prevalent HD | 100 | Total and Free Level | No association with CV mortality | |
| Shafi et al. [ | Prevalent HD | 1276 | Total and Free Level | No association with CV mortality | |
| Cao et al. [ | Prevalent HD | 258 | Total Level | Association with heart failure event | |
| CNS | Yeh et al. [ | CKD Stage 3 to 5 | 199 | Total Level | Association with cognitive impairment in Stage 3 patients; |
| Tamura et al. [ | Prevalent HD | 321 | Total Level | No association with cognitive impairment |
CV: cardiovascular, CNS: central nervous system. * The association disappeared with adjustment for p-cresol sulfate levels; ** the association was not adjusted for baseline eGFR.
Maneuvers to target indoxyl sulfate.
| Strategy | Study | Study Design | Intervention/Duration | Types of Patients | Number of Patients | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Increase dialytic removal | Meert et al. [ | Prospective | HDF (~19 L/session)/9 weeks | Prevalent HD | 13 | No change in total and free plasma levels compared to baseline |
| Krieter et al. [ | Cross-over | HDF (~21 L/session)/1 week | Prevalent HD | 8 | No change in dialytic clearance | |
| Meyer et al. [ | in vitro | Add dialysate sorbent | n/a | n/a | 2.4-fold increase in dialytic clearance | |
| Camacho et al. [ | Cross-over | Increase dialysate flow and dialyzer membrane size/2 weeks | Prevalent HD | 14 | 6% reduction in total plasma level; | |
| Tijink et al. [ | in vitro | Mixed-matrix membrane (diffusion and adsorption) | n/a | n/a | 82% reduction in total level | |
| Suppress production | Marzocco et al. [ | Post-hoc analysis * | Protein intake 0.3 g/kg/day vs. 0.6 g/kg/day/1 week | CKD(avg. CrCl 30 mL/min) | 32 | 37% reduction in total plasma level |
| Poesen et al. [ | Cross-over | Arabinoxylan vs. control/4 weeks | CKD(avg. eGFR 33 mL/min/1.73 m2) | 40 | No change in total plasma level | |
| Meijers et al. [ | Prospective | Oligofructose-inulin/4 weeks | Prevalent HD | 22 | No change in total plasma level | |
| Sirich et al. [ | Randomized | High-amylose corn starch vs. control/6 weeks | Prevalent HD | 40 | 18% reduction in total plasma level; | |
| Rossi et al. [ | Randomized | Synbiotic vs. control/6 weeks | CKD (avg. eGFR 24 mL/min/1.73 m2) | 31 | No change in total plasma level | |
| Schulman et al. [ | Randomized | AST-120 9 g/day vs. control/avg. follow-up 90 weeks | CKD stage 3 to 5 | 2028 | No benefit in CKD progression | |
| Cha et al. [ | Randomized | AST-120 6 g/day vs. control/36 months | CKD stage 3 to 4 | 538 | No benefit in CKD progression; |
* Measurements of indoxyl sulfate were performed in patients who participated in a cross-over trial testing the effect of protein intake on FGF23 levels. Patients in the protein intake 0.3 g/kg/day group were also supplemented with keto-analogues.