Small steps towards the potential of ‘preventive’ treatment of early phosphate loading in chronic kidney disease patients

Author:

Bover Jordi1,Cozzolino Mario2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Fundació Puigvert, Department of Nephrology and Cardiology, IIB Sant Pau, RedinRen, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain

2. Renal Unit, San Paolo Hospital and San Carlo Hospital, ASST Santi Paolo e Carlo, Department of Health Sciences, University of Milan, Milan, Italy

Abstract

Abstract Few clinical studies have investigated the value of phosphate (P)-lowering therapies in early chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients in whom hyperphosphataemia has not yet clearly developed and they report conflicting and even unexpected results. In this issue of Clinical Kidney Journal, de Krijger et al. found that sevelamer carbonate (4.8 g/day for 8 weeks) did not induce a significant reduction of pulse wave velocity (PWV) and that fibroblast growth factor 23 (FGF23) did not decrease despite a decline in 24-h urine P excretion. To some extent these findings challenge the concept that ‘preventive’ P binder therapy to lower FGF23 is a useful approach, at least over this short period of time. Interestingly, in a subgroup of patients with absent or limited abdominal vascular calcification, treatment did result in a statistically significant reduction in adjusted PWV, suggesting that PWV is amenable to improvement in this subset. Interpretation of the scarce and heterogeneous observations described in early CKD remains difficult and causality and/or the possibility of ‘preventive’ treatment may not yet be completely disregarded. Moreover, de Krijger et al. contribute to the identification of new sources of bias and methodological issues that may lead to more personalized treatments, always bearing in mind that not all patients and not all P binders are equal.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Transplantation,Nephrology

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