Abstract
Anemia in chronic kidney disease (CKD) has become an important clinical issue with the increased prevalence of elderly patients living with CKD progressing to kidney failure. The causes of anemia in elderly individuals tend to be multifactorial, exacerbated by the physiological effects of aging, frailty and declining kidney function. Erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs) are the conventional therapeutic option for anemia in CKD. However, ESA hyporesponsiveness is a commonly observed issue in clinical practice and an issue that is more challenging to resolve in elderly patients living with frailty, kidney disease, and multi-morbidities. Following the emergence of oral hypoxia-induced factor prolyl-hydroxylase inhibitors (HIF-PHI) in recent years, there is discussion on whether it is a solution to the conundrum of ESA hyporesponsiveness, as HIF-PHI treats anemia via an alternative physiological pathway. There remains uncertainty on the suitability of HIF-PHI use in elderly patients, given a lack of data on its safety over long-term follow-up for the elderly population. Further study is needed to provide answers, considering the clinical significance of this issue within a public-health scale.
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