| Literature DB >> 34564626 |
Vaibhav Maheshwari1, Xia Tao1, Stephan Thijssen1, Peter Kotanko1,2.
Abstract
Removal of protein-bound uremic toxins (PBUTs) during conventional dialysis is insufficient. PBUTs are associated with comorbidities and mortality in dialysis patients. Albumin is the primary carrier for PBUTs and only a small free fraction of PBUTs are dialyzable. In the past, we proposed a novel method where a binding competitor is infused upstream of a dialyzer into an extracorporeal circuit. The competitor competes with PBUTs for their binding sites on albumin and increases the free PBUT fraction. Essentially, binding competitor-augmented hemodialysis is a reactive membrane separation technique and is a paradigm shift from conventional dialysis therapies. The proposed method has been tested in silico, ex vivo, and in vivo, and has proven to be very effective in all scenarios. In an ex vivo study and a proof-of-concept clinical study with 18 patients, ibuprofen was used as a binding competitor; however, chronic ibuprofen infusion may affect residual kidney function. Binding competition with free fatty acids significantly improved PBUT removal in pre-clinical rat models. Based on in silico analysis, tryptophan can also be used as a binding competitor; importantly, fatty acids or tryptophan may have salutary effects in HD patients. More chemoinformatics research, pre-clinical, and clinical studies are required to identify ideal binding competitors before routine clinical use.Entities:
Keywords: CMPF; binding competition; hemodialysis; indoxyl sulfate; intoxication; p-cresyl sulfate
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34564626 PMCID: PMC8473190 DOI: 10.3390/toxins13090622
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Figure 1Schematic of binding competition between the protein-bound uremic toxin and competitor substance for the same binding site. The competitor drug is infused pre-dialyzer, leading to an increase in free toxin concentration and thus improved dialytic removal.
Figure 2(A) In vitro dialysis setup where albumin solution spiked with indoxyl sulfate was dialyzed against standard dialysate solution. Two binding competitors (denoted as “displacers”) were tested individually. (B) Indoxyl sulfate removal (measured at the dialysate outlet) for 10 min before and 10 min after starting the infusion upstream of the dialyzer (start of infusion denoted by the vertical dashed line). Three types of infusions were tested: phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) only (“Vehicle”), PBS with 1 mmol/L tryptophan (“TRP”), and PBS with 1 mmol/L docosahexaenoic acid (“DHA”).
Figure 3Binding competitor (denoted as “displacer”) infusion in ex vivo setup improved fractional removal of (A) indoxyl sulfate, (B) indole-3-acetic acid, and (C) hippuric acid. In this bench setup, uremic blood was dialyzed conventionally for the first 10 min, followed by infusion of a binding competitor for 10 min.
Figure 4Total removal of (A) urea, (B) creatinine, (C) p-cresyl sulfate, (D) indoxyl sulfate, and (E) indole-3-acetic acid in 3 h dialysis in pre-clinical 5/6 nephrectomized rat model. Removal was studied in the control arm vs. intralipid emulsion infusion (binding competitor) arm (figure obtained with permission from NDT). *** p < 0.001 and ** p < 0.01 compared with the control group.
Figure 5Dialytic clearance of uremic solutes during conventional hemodialysis before, during, and after infusion of a binding competitor into the arterial line upstream of the dialyzer. Ibuprofen was used as the binding competitor. Compared to the pre-infusion phase, there was a significant increase in indoxyl sulfate and p-cresyl sulfate clearance during the ibuprofen infusion, while the clearance of urea and creatinine (non-protein bound solutes) did not change. [* p-value, 0.01 compared with preceding phase; ** p-value, 0.001 compared with preceding phase; based on Wilcoxon signed rank test].
Figure 6Time course of (A) total indoxyl sulfate (IS) and (B) p-cresyl sulfate (pCS) serum concentration with different extracorporeal dialysis modalities. The line color legend shown in the left panel applies to both plots.
Figure 7Monthly time-course of p-cresyl sulfate (pCS) concentration without (A) and with binding competitor (B). The binding competitor tested in these simulations was 2000 mg of tryptophan dissolved in 500 mL saline.
Summary of existing evidence regarding use of binding competitor(s) for removal of protein-bound uremic toxins (PBUTs).
| Study Reference | Study Setting | PBUT(s) Studied | Binding Competitor(s) Used | Study Metric | Study Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tao et al. 2015 [ | In vitro | IS | TRP or docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) infused in extracorporeal circuit at constant rate | Fractional removal in the dialysate | TRP improved IS fractional removal from 10.2% at baseline to 18.5%; DHA improved the IS removal to 27.7% |
| Tao et al. 2016 [ | Ex vivo | IS, IAA, HA | Ibuprofen + furosemide or TRP infused in extracorporeal circuit at constant rate | Fractional removal in the dialysate | Ibuprofen + furosemide improved IS removal from 6.4% to 18.3% and IAA removal from 16.8% to 34.5%; TRP improved IS and IAA removal to 10.5% and 27.1%, respectively. |
| Li et al. 2019 [ | Pre-clinical uremic rat model | IS, pCS | Danhong injection or lithospermic acid infused intravenously at constant rate during latter 2 h of 4-h microdialysis. | Removal in first 2 h (without infusion) vs. latter 2 h (with infusion) | IS and pCS removal in dialysate improved by 119.5% and 127.6%, by lithospermic acid, respectively, which made up of 88% and 47%, respectively, of the total displacement effects of IS and pCS introduced by Danhong injection. |
| Maheshwari et al. 2019 [ | In silico analysis of IS and pCS removal during HD | IS, pCS | TRP or ibuprofen infused into the extracorporeal circuit at constant rate during 4-h HD | Time-averaged concentration (TAC) after 1 month | TRP infusion in every HD session reduced the TAC by 28% for IS and 30% for pCS. |
| Shi et al. 2019 [ | In vitro | CMPF, IAA, IS, pCS | Free fatty acids infused in extracorporeal circuit at constant rate | Fractional removal in the dialysate | CMPF fractional removal improved to 14.4% vs. no removal at baseline; pCS, IS, and IAA fractional removal from 8%, 11.7%, and 15.7% at baseline to 28%, 35%, and 40%, respectively. |
| Shi et al. 2019 [ | Pre-clinical uremic rat model | pCS, IS, IAA | Intralipid™ (20%) infused intravenously 30 min before start of dialysis | Total solute removal in spent dialysate | Removal of pCS, IS, and IAA increased approximately 300%, compared to control. |
| Madero et al. 2019 [ | First-in-man proof-of-concept study in 18 ESKD patients on maintenance hemodialysis | IS, pCS, HA, TRP | Ibuprofen infused at constant rate during 20–40 min of 4-h HD | Dialysate clearance comparison during pre-infusion phase (0–20 min) vs. infusion phase (21–40 min) | Clearance improved from 6.6 mL/min to 20 mL/min for IS, and 4.4 to 14.9 mL/min for pCS; TRP clearance increased moderately. Urea and creatinine clearance were unchanged. |
| Maheshwari et al. 2020 [ | In silico analysis of drug intoxication treatment | Phenytoin, Carbamazepine | Infusion in extracorporeal circuit at constant rate. For phenytoin, aspirin was infused; for carbamazepine, ibuprofen was infused | Time required to bring patient back into therapeutic concentration range | For phenytoin, constant aspirin infusion reduced the HD time from 460 min to 330 min; for carbamazepine, constant ibuprofen infusion reduced the HD time from 265 min 220 min. |
| Shi et al. 2021 [ | Pre-clinical uremic rat model | IS, pCS, IAA, HA | Intralipid™ infused intravenously 30 min before start of dialysis; albumin dialysis with bovine serum albumin; Combination of binding competition and albumin dialysis | Total solute removal in spent dialysate | In the Intralipid™ arm, approximately 10-fold increase in IS and pCS removal compared to control arm. |
CMPF: 3-carboxy-4-methyl-5-propyl-2-furanpropionic acid; ESKD: end stage kidney disease; HA: hippuric acid; IAA: indole-3-acetic acid; IS: indoxyl sulfate; pCS: p-cresyl sulfate; TRP: tryptophane.