| Literature DB >> 28176969 |
Shayan Shirazian1, Olufemi Aina1, Youngjun Park1, Nawsheen Chowdhury1, Kathleen Leger1, Linle Hou1, Nobuyuki Miyawaki1, Vandana S Mathur2.
Abstract
Chronic kidney disease-associated pruritus (CKD-aP) is a distressing, often overlooked condition in patients with CKD and end-stage renal disease. It affects ~40% of patients with end-stage renal disease and has been associated with poor quality of life, poor sleep, depression, and mortality. Prevalence estimates vary based on the instruments used to diagnose CKD-aP, and standardized diagnostic instruments are sorely needed. Treatment studies have often yielded conflicting results. This is likely related to studies that are limited by small sample size, flawed designs, and nonstandardized diagnostic instruments. Several large well-designed treatment trials have recently been completed and may soon influence CKD-aP management.Entities:
Keywords: chronic kidney disease; depression; end-stage renal disease; itching; pruritus; uremia
Year: 2017 PMID: 28176969 PMCID: PMC5271405 DOI: 10.2147/IJNRD.S108045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Nephrol Renovasc Dis ISSN: 1178-7058
Recent studies examining the prevalence, characteristics and outcomes of CKD-aP
| Author, year | Study design and population | Itching and outcome tools | Prevalence | Characteristics | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pisoni et al, 2006 | 18,801 adult HD patients from 308 dialysis centers in DOPPS I (1996–2001) and 322 centers in DOPPS II (2002–2004) | Itching: VRS (5-grade) | Moderate to extreme pruritus in 42% of patients in DOPPS II and 45% in DOPPS I | Higher adjusted odds of moderate to extreme pruritus: male, lung disease, CHF, neuro disease, ascites, hepatitis C; higher Ca, phos, WBC count, and lower albumin | Patients with moderate to extreme pruritus compared to none: |
| Narita et al, 2006 | 1,773 adult Japanese HD patients followed for 2 years or until death | Itching: VAS: no/mild <4, Moderate =4–6.9, Severe ≥7. | No/mild =19.5%, moderate =27.9%, severe VAS =25.5% | Male, BUN, β2-microglobulin, Ca, and phos were risk factors for severe pruritus (adjusted). Low Ca and PTH associated with reduced risk | Severe pruritus is an independent predictor of death (HR =1.60) |
| Mathur et al, 2010 | 103 US adult HD patients followed for 3.5 months | Itching severity: VAS, and NRS QOL: Skindex-10, BII, self-assessed | Daily or nearly daily itching in 84%; ongoing (>1 year) in 59% | Younger age associated with more severe pruritus | Changes in itching severity ≥20% associated with reduced HR-QOL |
| Ramakrishnan et al, 2014 | 71,000 US HD and PD patients | Itching severity: VRS scale from the KDQOL survey (5-grade) | 60% “some itching”; 14.5% “very much or extremely bothered” | Itching associated with: younger, female, DM, CAD, COPD, liver disease, dialysis vintage, BMI; lower Hgb and albumin; higher Ca, phos, PTH, ferritin | Itching severity associated with: |
| Kimata et al, 2014 | 6,480 Japanese HD patients from JDOPPS (1996–2008); 60–65 facilities followed for a median of 1.9 years | Itching severity: VRS (5 grade) | 44% of patients experienced moderate to severe itching | Higher adjusted odds of moderate to extreme pruritus: older, male, smoking, HTN, AVG, ascites, hepatitis C, Ca, phos, or PTH levels; lower albumin, aluminum levels | Patients with moderate to extreme pruritus compared to no/mild pruritus: |
| Solak et al, 2016 | 402 Turkish patients with CKD 2–5 | Presence of itching: Previously defined by Zucker et al | 18.9% | Pruritus associated with furosemide, lower Hgb, eosinophils and xerosis cutis. ACEi or ARB not associated (unadjusted) | Itching severity not associated with CKD stage |
| Khanna et al, 2010 | 150 Indian CKD 3–5 patients, and 50 on dialysis | Itching severity: VAS, and by 2 dermatologists | 28.7%, pre-dialysis; 58%, dialysis | Pruritus associated with dialysis vintage, xerosis, and high Ca and phos | Increased prevalence of pruritus with worsening kidney disease |
| Min et al, 2016 | 425 HD and 223 PD patients from Korea | Itching intensity: VAS, Modified Pauli-Magnus scale | PD > HD – 62.6% vs 48.3% with VAS ≥1 | Pruritus negatively correlated with Kt/V and positively correlated with dialysis vintage, BP, cholesterol (adjusted) | PD associated with higher odds of pruritus than HD (AOR =1.76) |
| Li et al, 2015 | 362 Chinese PD patients | Itching intensity: VAS (no =0, mild to moderate =1–5, severe >5) | No =34.8%, mild to moderate =52.5%, severe = 12.7%, | Pruritus associated with dialysis vintage (AOR =1.04) and higher PTH (AOR =1.3) | Severe pruritus associated with higher |
Abbreviations: CKD-aP, chronic kidney disease-associated pruritus; HD, hemodialysis; DOPPS, dialysis outcomes and practice patterns study; VRS, verbal rating scale; QOL, quality of life; SF, short form; CHF, congestive heart failure; Ca, calcium; phos, phosphorus; WBC, white blood cell; ESRD, end-stage renal disease; AOR, adjusted odds ratio; MCS, mental component summary; PCS, physical component summary; VAS, visual analog scale, BUN, blood urea nitrogen; PTH, parathyroid hormone; NRS, numeric rating scale; BII, brief itching inventory; SSMOS, sleep survey medical outcomes survey; MOS, medical outcomes survey; BDI, Beck’s depression inventory; KDQOL, kidney disease QOL; DM, diabetes mellitus; CAD, coronary artery disease; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; BMI, body mass index; Hgb, hemoglobin; HTN, hypertension; AVG, arteriovenous graft; CKD, chronic kidney disease; ACEi, angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor; ARB, angiotensin receptor blocker; PD peritoneal dialysis; PSQI, pittsburgh sleep quality index; HR, health related; IV, intravenous; ESA, erythropoietin.
Figure 1Prior treatments for chronic kidney disease-associated pruritus (CKD-aP) by proposed pathogenic mechanism.
Selected double-blind randomized-controlled treatment trials in patients with CKD-aP
| Author, year | Study design and population | Intervention | Mechanism of action | Itching severity tool | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Silva et al, 1994 | DB, crossover RCT, of 29 HD patients (18 completed) | Thalidomide vs placebo treated for 2 weeks | Immunomodulator | UP score =NRS (4-grade) | 56% responded with 78% reduction in UP score. Placebo with no response. ( |
| Cho et al, 1997 | DB, crossover, RCT of 22 HD patients | Capsaicin 0.025% cream vs placebo base cream treated for 8 weeks | Analgesic | Patient self-assessment = modified VRS: none, mild, moderate, or severe | 19/22 with relief of the itching. |
| Pauli-Magnus et al, 2000 | DB, crossover, RCT of 23 dialysis patients | Naltrexone vs placebo treated for 8 weeks | Mu-opioid antagonist | Detailed score: severity, distribution, sleep disturbance; VAS | VAS decreased 29.2% on naltrexone and 16.9% on placebo. |
| Gunal et al, 2004 | DB, crossover, RCT of 25 HD patients | Gabapentin vs placebo treated for 8 weeks | Analgesic | VAS | Gabapentin significantly improved itch severity compared to placebo. |
| Duque et al, 2005 | DB, RCT of 22 HD patients | Tacrolimus 0.1% ointment vs placebo treated for 4 weeks | Immunomodulator | VAS | Tacrolimus 0.1% ointment similar to placebo ( |
| Chen et al, 2006 | DB, crossover, RCT of 17 dialysis patients | GLA 2.2% cream vs placebo-based cream treated for 4 weeks | Immunomodulator | VAS and a modified questionnaire | GLA-based cream significantly improved pruritus compared to placebo ( |
| Young et al, 2009 | DB, RCT of 28 HD patients | Pramoxine 1% lotion vs control lotion treated for 4 weeks | Analgesic | VAS | 61% decrease in itch intensity versus 12% in control group |
| Kumagai et al, 2010 | Multicenter, DB, RCT of 337 HD patients | Nalfurafine 5 vs 2.5 μg vs placebo randomized 1:1:1 and treated for 2 weeks | Kappa-opioid agonist | VAS | Both 5 and 2.5 μg nalfurafine significantly reduced VAS score compared to placebo ( |
| Balaska et al, 2011 | DB, RCT of 100 dialysis patients treated for 1 week and followed for 56 days | Glycerol 15% and paraffin 10% in an oil-in-water emulsion vs emulsion | Rehydrating dry skin | El Gamma score (xerosis severity) and VAS | Treatment response (xerosis) in 73% of the patients compared to 44% in control ( |
| Feily et al, 2012 | DB, RCT of 60 dialysis patients | Cromolyn sodium 4% cream vs placebo treated for 4 weeks | Mast-cell stabilizer | VAS scale | Cromolyn sodium 4% improved itching severity compared to placebo ( |
| Shirazian et al, 2013 | DB, RCT of 50 HD patients | Ergocalciferol 50,000 IU vs placebo treated for 12 weeks | Immunomodulator | Pruritus severity questionnaire | Percent change in itch 38.9% with treatment vs 47.5% with placebo ( |
| Yue et al, 2015 | DB, RCT of 188 HD or PD patients | Pregabalin vs ondansetron vs placebo treated for 12 weeks | Analgesic or serotonin receptor antagonist | VAS and modified Duo’s VAG Scale | Pregabalin significantly improved pruritus compared to ondansetron and placebo ( |
| Vandana et al, 2015 | Multicenter (46 US and EU sites), DB RCT of 373 HD patients | Nalbuphine ER tablets (2 doses) vs placebo treated for 8 weeks | Kappa-opioid agonist, mu-opioid antagonist | NRS, Skindex-10, Itch MOS, HADS | Itching intensity (primary endpoint) was significantly improved vs placebo |
Abbreviations: CKD-aP, chronic kidney disease-associated pruritus; DB, double-blind; RCT, randomized controlled trial; HD, hemodialysis; UP, uremic pruritus; NRS, numerical rating scale; VRS, verbal rating scale; VAS, visual analog scale; GLA, gamma-linolenic acid; IU, international units; EU, European union, ER, extended release; MOS, medical outcomes survey; HADS, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale.