epoetin-alfa has been researched along with Kidney-Diseases* in 76 studies
8 review(s) available for epoetin-alfa and Kidney-Diseases
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Iron and anemia in human biology: a review of mechanisms.
The biology of iron in relation to anemia is best understood by a review of the iron cycle, since the majority of iron for erythropoiesis is provided by iron recovered from senescent erythrocytes. In iron-deficiency anemia, storage iron declines until iron delivery to the bone marrow is insufficient for erythropoiesis. This can be monitored with clinical indicators, beginning with low plasma ferritin, followed by decreased plasma iron and transferrin saturation, and culminating in red blood cells with low-Hb content. When adequate dietary iron is provided, these markers show return to normal, indicating a response to the dietary supplement. Anemia of inflammation (also known as anemia of chronic disease, or ACD) follows a different course, because in this form of anemia storage iron is often abundant but not available for erythropoiesis. The diagnosis of ACD is more difficult than the diagnosis of iron-deficiency anemia, and often the first identified symptom is the failure to show a response to a dietary iron supplement. Confirmation of ACD is best obtained from elevated markers of inflammation. The treatment of ACD, which typically employs erythropoietin (EPO) supplements and intravenous iron (i.v.-iron), is empirical and often falls shorts of therapeutic goals. Dialysis patients show a complex pattern of anemia, which results from inadequate EPO production by the kidney, inflammation, changes in nutrition, and blood losses during treatment. EPO and i.v.-iron are the mainstays of treatment. Patients with heart failure can be anemic, with incidence as high as 50%. The causes are multifactorial; inflammation now appears to be the primary cause of this form of anemia, with contributions from increased plasma volume, effects of drug therapy, and other complications of heart disease. Discerning the mechanisms of anemia for the heart failure patient may aid rational therapy in each case. Topics: Anemia; Anemia, Iron-Deficiency; Chronic Disease; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Heart Diseases; Hematinics; Humans; Inflammation; Iron; Kidney Diseases; Male; Recombinant Proteins | 2008 |
Insights in anemia management.
After almost 20 years, anemia in chronic kidney disease (CKD) and its treatment remain the focus of multiple questions for clinicians and investigators. The optimal hemoglobin (Hb) for patients with CKD is controversial and different targets are probably required for different populations. The current literature does not support an upper Hb target >12 g/dl and there is a clear demonstration of increased risk with Hb targets >13 g/dl. With this narrow target of 11-12 g/dl, fluctuations in Hb concentration are commonly observed in patients being treated with erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs). Studies to date provide a suggestion of an association between Hb cycling and mortality, but they have been primarily exploratory in nature and clinical trials comparing treatment strategies leading to different degrees of Hb variability are needed. The great majority of incidences of pure red cell aplasia (PRCA) was associated with ESA therapy and was first recognized several years ago after a change in the formulation in which human serum albumin was eliminated and replaced by polysorbate-80 in patients on epoetin alfa (Eprex). Years later, a registry (PRIMS) was established by the health authorities as part of a reapproval of the subcutaneous route to confirm that the cause of PRCA has been eliminated. The ongoing PRIMS study is a 3-year observation period prospective multicenter and international (Europe and Australia) registry that could serve as a model for assessment of the immunogenicity profiles of currently marketed and future ESAs. The association with a change in formulation makes PRCA of interest to the biotechnology industry as well as the medical community because it raises the broader question of the potential immunogenicity of biopharmaceuticals in general. Topics: Anemia; Chronic Disease; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Hemoglobins; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Recombinant Proteins; Red-Cell Aplasia, Pure | 2008 |
Extended dosing intervals with erythropoiesis-stimulating agents in chronic kidney disease: a review of clinical data.
The recombinant human erythropoietins epoetins alfa and beta have relatively short half-lives ( approximately 24 h by subcutaneous route) and have traditionally been administered 2 or 3 times a week for the treatment of anaemia in patients with chronic kidney disease. However, multiple weekly injections are inconvenient for both the patient and the healthcare provider. With the introduction of the longer-acting erythropoiesis-stimulating agent darbepoetin alfa, there has been growing interest in longer dosing intervals for erythropoiesis-stimulating agents. Data from several randomized studies have shown that darbepoetin alfa is effective in maintaining haemoglobin levels when administered (subcutaneously, intravenously or both) every 2 weeks in dialysis patients, and every 2 weeks or monthly in patients with chronic kidney disease not yet receiving dialysis. Moreover, intravenous administration with darbepoetin alfa does not require a higher dosage compared with the subcutaneous route. Epoetins alfa and beta have also been studied in similar schedules, although few data from well-designed studies are available. Current data suggest that once-weekly administration of these forms of epoetin is feasible in dialysis patients, but dose increases are often required when switching patients from traditional twice- or thrice-weekly schedules. Also, administration of epoetins every other week is feasible in selected patients with chronic renal insufficiency. Further study is required to clarify the optimum schedule for epoetins in these settings. Topics: Anemia; Chronic Disease; Clinical Trials as Topic; Economics, Pharmaceutical; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Hematinics; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Peritoneal Dialysis; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Dialysis; Renal Insufficiency, Chronic | 2007 |
Use of erythropoiesis-stimulating agents in patients with anemia of chronic kidney disease: overcoming the pharmacological and pharmacoeconomic limitations of existing therapies.
Stage 3 chronic kidney disease (CKD), which is characterized by a glomerular filtration rate of 30 to 60 mL/min/1.73 m2 (reference range, 90-200 mL/min/1.73m2 for a 20-year-old, with a decrease of 4 mL/min per decade), affects approximately 8 million people in the United States. Anemia is common in patients with stage 3 CKD and, if not corrected, contributes to a poor quality of life. Erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs), introduced almost 2 decades ago, have replaced transfusions as first-line therapy for anemia. This review summarizes the current understanding of the role of ESAs in the primary care of patients with anemia of CKD and discusses pharmacological and pharmacoeconomic issues raised by recent data. Relevant studies in the English language were identified by searching the MEDLINE database (1987-2006). Two ESAs are currently available in the United States, epoetin alfa and darbepoetin alfa. More frequent dosing with epoetin alfa is recommended by the labeled administration guidelines because it has a shorter half-life than darbepoetin alfa. Clinical experience also supports extended dosing intervals for both these ESAs. Use of ESAs in the management of anemia of CKD is associated with improved quality of life, increased survival, and decreased progression of renal failure. Some evidence suggests that ESAs have a cardioprotective effect. However, correction of anemia to hemoglobin levels greater than 12 g/dL (to convert to g/L, multiply by 10) appears to increase the risk of adverse cardiac outcomes and progression of kidney disease in some patients. The prescription of ESAs in the primary care setting requires an understanding of the accepted use of these agents, the associated pharmacoeconomic challenges, and the potential risks. This review considers the need to balance effective ESA dosing intervals against the potential risks of treatment. Topics: Anemia; Chronic Disease; Darbepoetin alfa; Disease Progression; Drug Administration Schedule; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Ferric Compounds; Ferritins; Heart Failure; Hematinics; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Physician's Role; Primary Health Care; Quality of Life; Recombinant Proteins | 2007 |
Anemia in chronic kidney disease: causes, diagnosis, treatment.
Most patients with chronic kidney disease eventually become anemic. We should view the management of anemia in these patients as part of the overall management of the many clinically relevant manifestations of chronic kidney disease. Erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs) are safe and should be used, as treating anemia may forestall some of the target-organ damage of chronic kidney disease. Topics: Anemia; Anemia, Iron-Deficiency; Chronic Disease; Darbepoetin alfa; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Hematinics; Humans; Iron; Kidney Diseases; Practice Guidelines as Topic; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Dialysis | 2006 |
The relative dosing of epoetin alfa and darbepoetin alfa in chronic kidney disease.
The purpose of this study was to review and analyze current research to evaluate the dose ratio of epoetin alfa and darbepoetin alfa for the treatment of anemia in chronic kidney disease (CKD) and to identify determinants of the variation in epoetin alfa:darbepoetin alfa dose ratios across studies.. A systematic review of the literature for comparative switch and non-switch studies of epoetin alfa and darbepoetin alfa treatments in CKD for the period 2000-2005 was performed. Two reviewers independently assessed the quality of the information. Data on the study design and outcomes were collected for each selected study. The dose ratio from epoetin alfa to darbepoetin alfa was calculated for each study, and the results were reported stratified by study characteristics. To control for differences in study design and characteristics that could explain the variability in the relative dosages of the two agents across studies, multivariate regression analysis was conducted. Based on these results, a dose conversion ratio for Canada was estimated.. A total of 21 studies involving 16 378 patients exposed to epoetin alfa or darbepoetin alfa in CKD were identified. Univariate analysis of the dose ratios indicated a mean dose ratio of 217:1 (IU of epoetin alfa:mug of darbepoetin alfa). Results from the multivariate analysis demonstrated that the study design (i.e., switch study versus straight comparison studies) and geographical coverage (i.e., United States) affected the results. Based on the multivariate analysis, the dose conversion ratio between epoetin alfa and darbepoetin alfa for Canada was 169:1.. Despite limitations associated with switching studies and the limited total number of studies available, this systematic review based on aggregated results provides further evidence to the clinical community that the dose conversion ratio for epoetin alfa:darbepoetin alfa in CKD patients in Canada is approximately 169:1. At that ratio, treatment with epoetin alfa is 11-18% cheaper than treatment with darbepoetin alfa in Canada. Topics: Anemia; Chronic Disease; Darbepoetin alfa; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Multivariate Analysis; Recombinant Proteins | 2006 |
[CRITICAL OBSERVATIONS OF THE PROBLEM OF NEPHROGENIC ANEMIA. II].
Topics: Anemia; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Humans; Kidney Diseases | 1965 |
[THE RENAL CONTROL OF HEMOPOIESIS: ERYTHROPOIETIN].
Topics: Anemia; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Hematopoiesis; Humans; Kidney; Kidney Diseases; Kidney Neoplasms; Pathology; Physiology; Polycythemia | 1963 |
15 trial(s) available for epoetin-alfa and Kidney-Diseases
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Prospective multicenter study of HX575 (biosimilar epoetin-α) in patients with chronic kidney disease applying a target hemoglobin of 10--12 g/dl.
HX575 was approved in the European Union in August 2007 as the first-ever biosimilar epoetin-α product. The present study extended the safety database on HX575 by monitoring adverse events (AEs) in clinical practice. Hemoglobin (Hb) levels and HX575 doses were recorded for the assessment of efficacy. This open, 6-month single-arm study was conducted in 10 European countries with a target enrollment of 1,500 patients with anemia due to chronic kidney disease (CKD). HX575 was intravenously (i.v.) administered aiming at an Hb target of 10 - 12 g/dl. Most patients (92.3%) had already received erythropoiesis stimulating agents (ESAs) treatment before enrolment into this study; the recorded treatments mainly comprised i.v. or subcutaneous (s.c.) administration of epoetin-α, epoetin-β or darbepoetin. The study period covered 770 patient years. The observed AE profile was in line with expectations for this patient population. Thrombotic vascular events (TVEs) were reported in 11.9% of patients (0.2612 per patient year). Tumor incidence was 1.4% (0.0299 per patient year). No subject developed anti-epoetin antibodies. Mean Hb levels were effectively maintained between 11.2 and 11.3 g/dl following the conversion from a broad spectrum of pre-study ESA treatments with stable overall mean i.v. HX575 doses. The proportion of patients within the Hb target range increased from 57.5% at baseline to 66.8% at study end. Topics: Adult; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Anemia; Biomarkers; Biosimilar Pharmaceuticals; Chronic Disease; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Europe; Female; Hematinics; Hemoglobins; Humans; Injections, Intravenous; Kidney Diseases; Male; Middle Aged; Neoplasms; Prospective Studies; Recombinant Proteins; Thrombosis; Time Factors; Treatment Outcome; Young Adult | 2012 |
A secondary analysis of the CHOIR trial shows that comorbid conditions differentially affect outcomes during anemia treatment.
The CHOIR trial in anemic patients with chronic kidney disease compared epoetin-alfa treatment with low (11.3 g/l) and high (13.5 g/l) hemoglobin targets on the composite end point of death, hospitalization for heart failure, stroke, and myocardial infarction. However, other anemia management trials in patients with chronic kidney disease found there was increased risk when hemoglobin is targeted above 13 g/dl. In this secondary analysis of the CHOIR trial, we compared outcomes among the subgroups of patients with diabetes and heart failure to describe the comparative relationship of treatment to these two different hemoglobin goals. By Cox regression analysis, there was no increased risk associated with the higher hemoglobin target among patients with heart failure. In patients without heart failure, however, the hazard ratio (1.86) associated with the higher target was significant. Comparing survival curves in an unadjusted model, patients with diabetes did not have a greater hazard associated with the higher target. Subjects without diabetes had a significantly greater hazard in the high as compared to the low target, but the interaction between diabetes and the target was not significant. We suggest that the increased risks associated with higher hemoglobin targets are not clinically apparent among subgroups with greater mortality risk. These differential outcomes underscore the need for dedicated trials in these subpopulations. Topics: Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Anemia; Chronic Disease; Comorbidity; Diabetes Mellitus; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Heart Failure; Hemoglobins; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Male; Middle Aged; Recombinant Proteins; Regression Analysis; Retrospective Studies; Survival Analysis; Treatment Outcome | 2010 |
A randomized controlled study comparing once-weekly to every-2-week and every-4-week dosing of epoetin alfa in CKD patients with anemia.
Extended-interval dosing of epoetin alfa (EPO) is commonly used to treat anemia in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). This study aimed to demonstrate that EPO dosed every 2 weeks (Q2W) and every 4 weeks (Q4W) was noninferior to once-weekly (QW) dosing.. 430 anemic subjects with stage 3 to 4 CKD receiving a stable QW dose of EPO were randomized 1:1:2 to QW, Q2W, and Q4W dosing for 36 weeks. Hemoglobin (Hb) was measured weekly, and the dose of EPO was adjusted to maintain an Hb level of 11.0 to 11.9 g/dl. The primary endpoint was change in Hb from baseline to the average of the last 12 weeks of treatment.. Both the Q2W and Q4W dosing groups were noninferior to the QW group. The estimated difference of the mean change in Hb between Q2W and QW was -0.03 g/dl; and between Q4W and QW was -0.09 g/dl. From weeks 13 to 37, the mean percentage of weeks per subject with Hb 10.0 to 11.9 g/dl, inclusive, was 81% for QW, 81% for Q2W, and 75% for Q4W. Death occurred, respectively, in 4%, 3%, and 4%; thromboembolic vascular events occurred in 3%, 5%, and 3%; and serious adverse events occurred in 22%, 26%, and 26% of subjects.. Q2W and Q4W EPO dosing maintained Hb levels in subjects with stage 3 to 4 CKD. Deaths, thromboembolic vascular events, and serious adverse events were comparable across the dosing groups. Topics: Adult; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Anemia; Drug Administration Schedule; Drug Monitoring; Epoetin Alfa; Erythrocyte Transfusion; Erythropoietin; Female; Hematinics; Hemoglobins; Humans; Iron Compounds; Kidney Diseases; Male; Middle Aged; Recombinant Proteins; Risk Assessment; Severity of Illness Index; Thromboembolism; Time Factors; Treatment Outcome; United States; Young Adult | 2010 |
Association of anemia and erythropoiesis stimulating agents with inflammatory biomarkers in chronic kidney disease.
Inflammatory cytokines are important predictors of cardiovascular mortality especially in patients with chronic kidney disease. Here we explored the relationship of anemia and epoetin treatment to inflammatory cytokine levels in patients with chronic kidney disease. One hundred non-dialysis patients with chronic kidney disease over 18 years of age were evenly split into anemic and non-anemic cohorts. Of the 50 anemic patients, 23 were receiving erythropoiesis stimulating agents treatments. Levels of tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha were found to be significantly higher and serum albumin was significantly lower with trends towards higher interleukin (IL)-6 and IL-8 in anemic compared to non-anemic patients. Further analysis by multiple logistic regression found that anemic patients treated with erythropoiesis stimulating agents had significantly higher odds for the upper two quartiles for IL-6, IL-8 and TNF-alpha compared to non-anemic patients. Our study found that the anemia of chronic kidney disease was associated with up regulation of TNF-alpha, and possibly IL-6 and IL-8 along with increased levels of these proinflammatory cytokines in patients treated with epoetin. Topics: Aged; Anemia; Biomarkers; Case-Control Studies; Chronic Disease; Cytokines; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Hematinics; Humans; Inflammation; Interleukin-6; Interleukin-8; Kidney Diseases; Male; Middle Aged; Recombinant Proteins; Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha; Up-Regulation | 2008 |
Secondary analysis of the CHOIR trial epoetin-alpha dose and achieved hemoglobin outcomes.
Trials of anemia correction in chronic kidney disease have found either no benefit or detrimental outcomes of higher targets. We did a secondary analysis of patients with chronic kidney disease enrolled in the Correction of Hemoglobin in the Outcomes in Renal Insufficiency trial to measure the potential for competing benefit and harm from achieved hemoglobin and epoetin dose trials. In the 4 month analysis, significantly more patients in the high-hemoglobin compared to the low-hemoglobin arm were unable to achieve target hemoglobin and required high-dose epoetin-alpha. In unadjusted analyses, the inability to achieve a target hemoglobin and high-dose epoetin-alpha were each significantly associated with increased risk of a primary endpoint (death, myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure or stroke). In adjusted models, high-dose epoetin-alpha was associated with a significant increased hazard of a primary endpoint but the risk associated with randomization to the high hemoglobin arm did not suggest a possible mediating effect of higher target via dose. Similar results were seen in the 9 month analysis. Our study demonstrates that patients achieving their target had better outcomes than those who did not; and among subjects who achieved their randomized target, no increased risk associated with the higher hemoglobin goal was detected. Prospective studies are needed to confirm this relationship and determine safe dosing algorithms for patients unable to achieve target hemoglobin. Topics: Aged; Anemia; Chronic Disease; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Hemoglobins; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Male; Middle Aged; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Insufficiency; Risk; Treatment Outcome | 2008 |
Hemoglobin targets and blood transfusions in hemodialysis patients without symptomatic cardiac disease receiving erythropoietin therapy.
Optimal hemoglobin targets for chronic kidney disease patients receiving erythropoiesis-stimulating agents remain controversial. The effects of different hemoglobin targets on blood transfusion requirements have not been well characterized, despite their relevance to clinical decision-making.. Five hundred ninety-six incident hemodialysis patients without symptomatic cardiac disease were randomly assigned to hemoglobin targets of 9.5 to 11.5 g/dl or 13.5 to 14.5 g/dl for 96 wk using epoetin alfa as primary therapy and changes in left ventricular structure as the primary outcome (previously reported). Patients were masked to treatment assignment. Blood transfusion data were prospectively collected at 4-wk intervals.. The mean age and prior duration of dialysis therapy of the study population were 50.8 and 0.8 yr, respectively. Previously reported mortality was similar in low and high-target subjects, at 4.7 (95% confidence interval 3.0, 7.3) and 3.1 (1.8, 5.4) per hundred patient years, respectively. Transfusion rates were 0.66 (0.59, 0.74) units of blood per year in low and 0.26 (0.22, 0.32) in high-target subjects (P < 0.0001). Hemoglobin level at transfusion (7.7 [7.5, 7.9]) versus 8.1 [7.6, 8.5] g/dl) were similar with both groups. High hemoglobin target was a significant predictor of time to first transfusion independent of baseline associations (hazard ratio = 0.42; 95% confidence interval = 0.26-0.67).. In hemodialysis patients with comparatively low mortality risks, normal hemoglobin targets may reduce the need for transfusions. Topics: Anemia; Blood Transfusion; Canada; Chronic Disease; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoiesis; Erythropoietin; Europe; Female; Hematinics; Hemoglobins; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Male; Middle Aged; Prospective Studies; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Dialysis; Time Factors; Treatment Outcome | 2008 |
A randomized study of extended dosing regimens for initiation of epoetin alfa treatment for anemia of chronic kidney disease.
Although epoetin alfa is commonly initiated weekly (QW) in anemic chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients, recent evidence indicates that it can be initiated every 2 wk (Q2W) and used in maintenance therapy every 4 wk (Q4W). This study examined the feasibility of initiating epoetin alfa Q4W in anemic CKD patients not receiving dialysis.. This open-label study randomized subjects (1:2:2:2) to treatment with epoetin alfa 10,000 IU QW, 20,000 IU Q2W, 20,000 IU Q4W, or 40,000 IU Q4W for 16 wk. Subjects were > or =18 yr, had hemoglobin <11 g/dl, a glomerular filtration rate of 15 to 90 ml/min per 1.73 m(2), and had not received erythropoietic therapy within 8 wk. The primary analysis was a noninferiority comparison of the 40,000 IU Q4W to the 20,000 IU Q2W group in the per-protocol population with respect to hemoglobin change from baseline to the end of study.. Of 262 subjects randomized, 229 comprised the per-protocol population. Mean hemoglobin change from baseline for the 40,000 IU Q4W group (1.24 g/dl) was not inferior to the 20,000 IU Q2W group (1.11 g/dl) with the lower limit of 95% CI, -0.21 g/dl. In the QW, 20,000 IU Q2W, 20,000 IU Q4W, and 40,000 IU Q4W groups, 90%, 87%, 75%, and 86% of subjects, respectively, achieved a hemoglobin increase > or =1 g/dl. Serious adverse events were similar across all groups.. Epoetin alfa can be initiated Q4W in anemic CKD subjects. Topics: Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Anemia; Chronic Disease; Drug Administration Schedule; Epoetin Alfa; Erythrocyte Transfusion; Erythropoietin; Feasibility Studies; Female; Ferritins; Hematinics; Hemoglobins; Humans; Injections, Subcutaneous; Iron Compounds; Kidney Diseases; Male; Middle Aged; Recombinant Proteins; Transferrin; Treatment Outcome; United States | 2008 |
Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic profiles of extended dosing of epoetin alfa in anemic patients who have chronic kidney disease and are not on dialysis.
Emerging evidence suggests that epoetin alfa can be administered at extended intervals of up to 4 wk. This open-label, randomized study was performed to characterize the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic profiles of four dosing regimens of epoetin alfa administered subcutaneously in anemic patients who had chronic kidney disease and were not on dialysis.. Thirty-eight patients, enrolled from nine centers in the United States, were > or =18 yr of age and had hemoglobin <11.0 g/dl and GFR 12 to 60 ml/min per 1.73 m(2). Patients received one of four epoetin alfa dosing regimens: 50 IU/kg three times per week, 10,000 IU once weekly, or 20,000 IU every 2 wk for 36 d or 40,000 IU every 4 wk for 64 d. Each regimen provided a similar dosage of epoetin alfa over 4 wk. Dosage adjustments were not permitted.. Drug exposure to epoetin alfa over 4 wk, based on area under the curve, was somewhat higher with the extended interval regimens compared with the three-times-weekly regimen. Mean change in hemoglobin during the study period was similar for all regimens. No patients were transfused. Three patients experienced five serious adverse events, none of which was considered treatment related.. Extended dosing interval regimens of epoetin alfa yielded modest pharmacokinetic differences but a similar pharmacodynamic response, suggesting that less frequent, higher dosages of epoetin alfa may be as effective as the current three-times-weekly regimen in anemic patients who have chronic kidney disease and are not on dialysis. Topics: Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Anemia; Chronic Disease; Dialysis; Drug Administration Schedule; Epoetin Alfa; Erythrocyte Count; Erythropoietin; Female; Hematinics; Hemoglobins; Humans; Injections, Subcutaneous; Kidney Diseases; Male; Middle Aged; Prospective Studies; Recombinant Proteins; Reticulocyte Count; Treatment Outcome; United States | 2008 |
Greater epoetin alfa responsiveness is associated with improved survival in hemodialysis patients.
Among hemodialysis patients, achieved hemoglobin is associated with Epoetin alfa dose and erythropoietin responsiveness. A prospective erythropoietin responsiveness measure was developed and its association with mortality evaluated.. Data from 321 participants were used and randomized to the hematocrit normalization arm of the Normal Hematocrit Cardiac Trial. Subjects were to receive a 50% Epoetin alfa dose increase at randomization. The prospective erythropoietin responsiveness measure was defined as the ratio of weekly hematocrit change (over the 3 wk after randomization) per Epoetin alfa dose increase (1000 IU/wk) corresponding to the mandated 50% dose increase at randomization. The distribution of responsiveness was divided into quartiles. Over a 1-yr follow-up, Cox proportional hazard modeling evaluated associations between this responsiveness measure and mortality.. Erythropoietin responsiveness values ranged from -2.1% to 2.4% per week per 1000 IU. Although subjects were similar across response quartiles, mortality ranged between 14% and 34% among subjects in the highest and lowest response quartiles (P = 0.0004), respectively. After adjusting for baseline prognostic indicators, highest versus lowest responsiveness was associated with a hazard ratio of 0.41 (95% confidence interval, 0.20 to 0.87).. Lower erythropoietin responsiveness is a strong, independent predictor of mortality risk and should be considered when evaluating associations between clinical outcomes and potential prognostic indicators, such as Epoetin alfa dose and achieved hemoglobin values. Topics: Adult; Aged; Anemia; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Hematinics; Hematocrit; Hemoglobins; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Male; Middle Aged; Proportional Hazards Models; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Dialysis; Risk Assessment; Survival Analysis; Treatment Outcome | 2008 |
Epoetin delta in the management of renal anaemia: results of a 6-month study.
Epoetin delta is an epoetin that, unlike existing agents, is produced in a human cell line. The present study investigated the efficacy and tolerability of intravenous (i.v.) epoetin delta compared with i.v. epoetin alfa.. This was a 6-month, multicentre, randomized, double-blind trial in haemodialysis patients previously receiving epoetin alfa. Haematological parameters were assessed, and adverse events monitored. Equivalent efficacy was defined as a difference in mean haemoglobin between the two agents over weeks 12-24 of < or = 1 g/dl with a 90% confidence interval (CI) within the range -1 to 1 g/dl.. In total, 560 patients received epoetin delta while 192 received epoetin alfa, and 76.8% and 79.7% of patients, respectively, completed the study. Both agents showed similar efficacy in controlling anaemia: the point estimate for the difference in mean haemoglobin over weeks 12-24 was 0.01 g/dl (90% CI, -0.13, 0.15 g/dl), confirming equivalence. Adverse events were those expected in dialysis patients. Events possibly related to treatment occurred in 9.2% of patients receiving epoetin delta and 8.4% receiving epoetin alfa. Serious adverse events (SAEs) occurred in 33.0% and 26.7% of patients in the epoetin delta and epoetin alfa groups, respectively. Six patients in the epoetin delta group experienced an SAE considered possibly related to treatment (mostly access-related clotting), compared with no patient in the epoetin delta group. None of these SAEs were life threatening.. Epoetin delta was shown to have an equivalent efficacy and safety profile to epoetin alfa in this 6-month study. Topics: Aged; Anemia; Blood Transfusion; Double-Blind Method; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Hemoglobins; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Male; Middle Aged; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Dialysis; Research Design; Time Factors | 2007 |
Once-monthly subcutaneous C.E.R.A. maintains stable hemoglobin control in patients with chronic kidney disease on dialysis and converted directly from epoetin one to three times weekly.
C.E.R.A., a continuous erythropoietin receptor activator, is in development to provide anemia correction and stable maintenance of hemoglobin (Hb) levels at extended administration intervals in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). This study examined its efficacy and safety when administered up to once monthly in patients who have CKD and are on dialysis and randomly convert directly from epoetin alpha or beta one to three times weekly.. In this three-arm, comparator-controlled, open-label, randomized, parallel-group, Phase III study, 572 dialysis patients (> or =18 yr) who were receiving stable subcutaneous epoetin one to three times weekly were randomly assigned (1:1:1) to continue epoetin or to receive subcutaneous C.E.R.A. once monthly or twice monthly for 52 wk. Dosage was adjusted to maintain Hb +/-1.0 g/dl of baseline level. Primary end point was mean change in Hb level between baseline and the evaluation period (weeks 29 to 36).. Mean Hb levels during the evaluation period were similar between groups (once-monthly C.E.R.A. 11.5 g/dl; twice-monthly C.E.R.A. 11.7 g/dl; epoetin 11.5 g/dl). The difference between C.E.R.A. and epoetin in mean change (97.5% confidence interval) in Hb concentration between baseline and evaluation was -0.022 g/dl (-0.262 to 0.217) for once monthly and 0.141 g/dl (-0.098 to 0.380) for twice monthly. Analysis demonstrated that C.E.R.A. was as effective as epoetin in maintaining Hb and was well tolerated.. Subcutaneous C.E.R.A. once or twice monthly successfully maintained tight and stable Hb levels in patients who were on dialysis and randomly converted directly from epoetin one to three times weekly. Topics: Anemia; Chronic Disease; Drug Administration Schedule; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Hematinics; Hemoglobins; Humans; Injections, Subcutaneous; Kidney Diseases; Male; Middle Aged; Polyethylene Glycols; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Dialysis | 2007 |
Effect of early correction of anemia on the progression of CKD.
This study is designed to assess the effect of early and complete correction of anemia by using recombinant human erythropoietin (epoetin) alfa on the progression of chronic kidney disease (CKD).. Patients were randomly assigned to achieve high (13 to 15 g/dL [130 to 150 g/L]) or low (11 to 12 g/dL [110 to 120 g/L]) hemoglobin-level targets during 4 months of stabilization, followed by 36 months of maintenance. Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) decrease was measured by using iohexol clearance. Quality of life, nutrition, and safety also were monitored.. Because of labeling changes for subcutaneous administration of epoetin alfa (Eprex; Johnson and Johnson, Schaffhausen, Switzerland), the study was terminated prematurely. There were 195 patients enrolled in each group; 108 high-hemoglobin and 133 low-hemoglobin patients entered the maintenance phase. Mean maintenance duration was 7.4 months for the high-hemoglobin group and 8.3 months for the low-hemoglobin group. GFR decrease was numerically, but not statistically significantly, lower with the high-hemoglobin group (0.058 versus 0.081 mL/min/1.73 m2/mo [< 0.01 mL/s/1.73 m2/mo]). Physical quality-of-life measures showed trends (Role-Physical, P = 0.055; Physical Function, P = 0.083) or statistically significant improvement (Vitality, P = 0.042) with high hemoglobin levels at the end of the stabilization phase. Adverse events were similar between groups. Cardiovascular adverse events occurred in 25% of the high-hemoglobin and 18% of the low-hemoglobin patients (P = 0.137). Neither epoetin dosage nor hemoglobin level was associated with cardiovascular adverse events or death.. These data suggest that normalization of hemoglobin levels in patients with CKD is safe. Longer duration studies are needed to clarify efficacy benefits with high hemoglobin levels. Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Aged; Anemia; Chronic Disease; Disease Progression; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Glomerular Filtration Rate; Hematinics; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Male; Middle Aged; Quality of Life; Recombinant Proteins | 2006 |
Canadian randomized trial of hemoglobin maintenance to prevent or delay left ventricular mass growth in patients with CKD.
This randomized clinical trial is designed to assess whether the prevention and/or correction of anemia, by immediate versus delayed treatment with erythropoietin alfa in patients with chronic kidney disease, would delay left ventricular (LV) growth. Study design and sample size calculations were based on previously published Canadian data.. One hundred seventy-two patients were randomly assigned. The treatment group received therapy with erythropoietin alfa subcutaneously to maintain or achieve hemoglobin (Hgb) level targets of 12.0 to 14.0 g/dL (120 to 140 g/L). The control/delayed treatment group had Hgb levels of 9.0 +/- 0.5 g/dL (90 +/- 5 g/L) before therapy was started: target level was 9.0 to 10.5 g/dL (90 to 105 g/L). Optimal blood pressure and parathyroid hormone, calcium, and phosphate level targets were prescribed; all patients were iron replete. The primary end point is LV growth at 24 months.. One hundred fifty-two patients were eligible for the intention-to-treat analysis: mean age was 57 years, 30% were women, 38% had diabetes, and median glomerular filtration rate was 29 mL/min (0.48 mL/s; range, 12 to 55 mL/min [0.20 to 0.92 mL/s]). Blood pressure and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor/angiotensin receptor blocker use were similar in the control/delayed treatment and treatment groups at baseline. Erythropoietin therapy was administered to 77 of 78 patients in the treatment group, with a median final dose of 2,000 IU/wk. Sixteen patients in the control/delayed treatment group were administered erythropoietin at a median final dose of 3,000 IU/wk. There was no statistically significant difference between groups for the primary outcome of mean change in LV mass index (LVMI) from baseline to 24 months, which was 5.21 +/- 30.3 g/m2 in the control/delayed treatment group versus 0.37 +/- 25.0 g/m2 in the treatment group. Absolute mean difference between groups was 4.85 g/m2 (95% confidence interval, -4.0 to 13.7; P = 0.28). Mean Hgb level was greater in the treatment group throughout the study and at study end was 12.75 g/dL (127.5 g/L in treatment group versus 11.46 g/dL [114.6 g/L] in control/delayed treatment group; P = 0.0001). LV growth occurred in 20.1% in the treatment group versus 31% in the control/delayed treatment group (P = 0.136). In patients with a stable Hgb level, mean LVMI did not change (-0.25 +/- 26.7 g/m2), but it increased in those with decreasing Hgb levels (19.3 +/- 28.2 g/m2; P = 0.002).. This trial describes disparity between observational and randomized controlled trial data: observed and randomly assigned Hgb level and LVMI are not linked; thus, there is strong evidence that the association between Hgb level and LVMI likely is not causal. Large randomized controlled trials with unselected patients, using morbidity and mortality as outcomes, are needed. Topics: Adult; Aged; Anemia; Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors; Antihypertensive Agents; Calcium; Canada; Chronic Disease; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Heart Failure; Heart Ventricles; Hemoglobins; Humans; Hypertension; Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular; Kidney Diseases; Lipids; Male; Middle Aged; Organ Size; Parathyroid Hormone; Phosphates; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Dialysis; Single-Blind Method; Treatment Failure; Ultrasonography | 2005 |
Hemorheological and hemodynamic changes in predialysis patients after normalization of hemoglobin with epoetin-alpha.
Changes in blood viscosity and total peripheral resistance may contribute to increased blood pressure during partial correction of renal anemia with erythropoietin. An increase in hemoglobin level is followed by decreases in cardiac output and left ventricular mass. We examined how normalization of hemoglobin in predialysis patients affects both hemorheological and hemodynamic variables.. Twelve moderately anemic predialysis patients (hemoglobin 115.9+/-7.8 g/l) received epoetin-alpha with the aim of achieving a normal hemoglobin level (135-160 g/l). Hemorheological variables were measured using rotational viscometry. Cardiac index was determined by means of Doppler echocardiography.. After 48 weeks, the hematocrit level had increased from 37.9%+/-3.0% to 47.0%+/-3.1% (p<0.0001). Blood viscosity increased from 3.84+/-0.33 to 4.59+/-0.4 mPa x s (p<0.001). Blood viscosity standardized to a hematocrit level of 45% and a plasma viscosity of 1.31 mPa x s did not change. Plasma viscosity, erythrocyte aggregation tendency and erythrocyte fluidity remained unchanged. The cardiac index decreased from 2.64+/-0.57 to 2.19+/-0.72 l/min/m(2) (p<0.05). The total peripheral resistance index increased from 3270+/-985 to 4013+/-1046 (dyn x s/cm(5))m(2) (p<0.05). Blood pressure remained constant, but the amount of antihypertensive medication used increased by 30%.. Hemoglobin normalization in predialysis patients raised blood viscosity and total peripheral resistance due to an increase in hematocrit level, without other consistent hemorheological changes. Antihypertensive therapy had to be increased in many patients to maintain an acceptable blood pressure. The cardiac index was reduced, which may have prevented further development of left ventricular hypertrophy. Topics: Anemia; Blood Viscosity; Cardiac Output; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Hematinics; Hemoglobins; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Male; Middle Aged; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Dialysis; Treatment Outcome; Vascular Resistance | 2005 |
Once-weekly epoetin alfa for treating the anemia of chronic kidney disease.
Anemia occurs in approximately 47% of patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) not on dialysis. Recombinant human erythropoietin (r-HuEPO, epoetin alfa) has been proven safe and effective for anemia treatment in patients with CKD using a three times-weekly regimen. The current study was conducted to evaluate the clinical safety and efficacy of a less frequent dosing regimen (once weekly) in this population.. This prospective, multicenter, open-label, non-randomized study enrolled 1,557 adult anemic (hemoglobin (Hb) < or = 10 g/dl) CKD patients not on dialysis. Epoetin alfa 10,000 U was administered subcutaneously once weekly for 16 weeks. Titration to 20,000 U once weekly at week 5 was permitted if patients had an increase in Hb < 1 g/dl. Safety and efficacy were assessed by changes in health-related quality of life (Linear Analog Scale Assessment (LASA) and Kidney Disease Questionnaire (KDQ)), changes in hematologic parameters and transfusion utilization, and incidence and severity of adverse events.. 1,338 patients were evaluable for efficacy. Mean Hb level increased from 9.1 g/dl at baseline to 11.6 g/dl at study completion (last observed value after baseline) (p < 0.0001). Overall, 89.8% of patients responded to once-weekly dosing, exhibiting an increase in Hb level of > or = 1 g/dl from baseline. The percentage of patients that required transfusion decreased from 11.1% (baseline) to 3.7% (during the study) (p < 0.0001). All quality-of-life parameters improved significantly from baseline (p < 0.0001). Mean LASA scores for energy, activity and overall quality of life increased from baseline to study completion by 27.9 mm (70.5%), 24.5 mm (57.0%) and 22.6 mm (47.4%), respectively. All 5 KDQ domains showed statistically significant improvements (p < 0.0001). Hb change was a strong predictor for all 5 KDQ domains and the overall score (p < 0.0001). Treatment with once-weekly epoetin alfa was well tolerated, similar to that reported with three times-weekly dosing.. Once-weekly epoetin alfa therapy is safe and effective for treating anemia in patients with CKD not on dialysis, and is associated with significant improvements in functional status and quality of life. Topics: Aged; Analysis of Variance; Anemia; Blood Transfusion; Chronic Disease; Comorbidity; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Hemoglobins; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Male; Middle Aged; Prospective Studies; Quality of Life; Recombinant Proteins; Regression Analysis; Treatment Outcome | 2004 |
53 other study(ies) available for epoetin-alfa and Kidney-Diseases
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Three-year safety observation of subcutaneous administration of epoetin-zeta in patients with chronic renal anemia: Results from PASCO II study.
Epoetin has been used to treat patients with renal anemia since 1988. -Anti-erythropoietin antibody-mediated pure red cell aplasia (PRCA) has been associated with epoetin usage, and a PRCA incidence of 4.5 per 10,000 patient-years was observed for epoetin-α (Eprex) in 2002. The PASCO II study (post-authorization safety cohort observation of Retacrit and Silapo (epoetin-ζ) administered subcutaneously for the treatment of renal anemia) followed 6,346 patients (4,501 Retacrit (group R); 1,845 Silapo (group S)) for up to 3 years of subcutaneous treatment with the biosimilar epoetin-ζ. One PRCA in 1 (0.02%) patient in group R who tested positive for neutralizing antibodies was reported. Overall, 527 adverse events of special interest (AESI) including PRCA occurred in 418 (6.60%) patients, lack of efficacy occurred in 34 (0.54%), and thromboembolic events in 389 (6.14%) patients. 41 adverse drug reactions other than AESIs were reported in 28 (0.44%) patients. The exposure-adjusted incident rate of PRCA was 0.84 per 10,000 patient-years. This real-world study showed that among patients with renal anemia receiving subcutaneous administration of the biosimilar product epoetin-ζ, the incidence rate of PRCA was substantially below the risk observed in 2002 for Eprex and that there was no immunogenicity concern or other new safety concern. Topics: Anemia; Biosimilar Pharmaceuticals; Chronic Disease; Epoetin Alfa; Hematinics; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Recombinant Proteins; Red-Cell Aplasia, Pure | 2023 |
Thyroid function analysis after roxadustat or erythropoietin treatment in patients with renal anemia: a cohort study.
This cohort study was designed to explore whether roxadustat or erythropoietin could affect thyroid function in patients with renal anemia.. The study involved 110 patients with renal anemia. Thyroid profile and baseline investigations were carried out for each patient. The patients were divided into two groups: 60 patients taking erythropoietin served as the control group (rHuEPO group) and 50 patients using roxadustat served as the experimental group (roxadustat group).. The results indicated that there were no significant differences in serum total thyroxine (TT4), total triiodothyronine (TT3), free triiodothyronine (FT3), free thyroxine (FT4) or thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) between the two groups at baseline. After treatment, TSH, FT3, and FT4 were significantly lower in the roxadustat group than in the rHuEPO group (. Roxadustat may lead to a higher risk of thyroid dysfunction, including low TSH, FT3 and FT4, than rHuEPO in patients with renal anemia. Topics: Anemia; Chronic Disease; Cohort Studies; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Thyroid Gland; Thyrotropin; Thyroxine; Triiodothyronine | 2023 |
Renoprotective effect of erythropoietin in zebrafish after administration of gentamicin: an immunohistochemical study for β-catenin and c-kit expression.
Gentamicin is an aminoglycoside antibiotic widely used in the treatment of infections caused by Gram-negative bacteria. The main limitation to its therapeutic effectiveness is the potential nephrotoxicity. Erythropoietin has a tissue protective effect widely demonstrated in the kidney. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the renoprotective effects of erythropoietin in a model of zebrafish (Danio rerio) after administration of gentamicin.. Sixty adult zebrafish were subdivided into three groups: group A was treated with gentamicin; group B received gentamicin and, 24 h later, epoetin alpha; group C received drug diluent only. In order to analyze the renoprotective activity of erythropoietin, the expression of c-kit and β-catenin was evaluated by immunohistochemistry.. Generally, the zebrafish renal tubule regenerates 15 days after an injury. Conversely, 7 days after gentamicin administration, animals treated with erythropoietin (group B) showed a better renal injury repair as documented by: increased expression of β-catenin, less degenerated tubules, greater number of centers of regeneration, positivity for c-kit only in immature-looking tubules and lymphohematopoietic cells.. The expression of c-kit and β-catenin suggests that erythropoietin may exert a role in regeneration reducing the extent of tubular damage from the outset after gentamicin administration. Topics: Animals; beta Catenin; Cell Proliferation; Cytoprotection; Disease Models, Animal; Epoetin Alfa; Gentamicins; Immunohistochemistry; Kidney Diseases; Kidney Tubules; Protective Agents; Regeneration; Stem Cell Factor; Time Factors; Zebrafish; Zebrafish Proteins | 2017 |
History of Erythropoiesis-Stimulating Agents, the Development of Biosimilars, and the Future of Anemia Treatment in Nephrology.
Exogenous replacement of erythropoietin (EPO) by recombinant human EPO has been considered a standard of care for the treatment of anemia in patients with chronic kidney disease for more than 20 years. Genetically engineered biologic proteins derived from human, animal, or microorganism sources are a major area of growth in modern medical care, accounting for one-third of new drug approvals in the past decade. Despite benefit to patients, the use of biologics comes at a significant cost, representing one of the fastest growing segments of strained healthcare budgets around the world.. Biosimilars, or biologic drugs that are designed to be highly similar to approved reference biologic drugs, have been available in Europe for more than 10 years with no unusual or unexpected effects compared to their reference biologics whose patents have expired. Given the success of the biosimilar approval pathway pioneered in Europe, it has served as a global reference for other regulatory authorities to establish and implement biosimilar licensure frameworks, including the United States (US), the largest pharmaceutical market in the world. Given 10 of the top 25 drugs sold in 2014 were biologics, and considering the rising costs of healthcare, biosimilars have the potential to become a significant part of the US market. Key Messages: For the nephrology community, the recent patent expiries for epoetin alfa (Epogen®, Amgen and Procrit®, Johnson & Johnson) have created the opportunity to develop biosimilar EPOs. And while no biosimilar in this therapeutic class is approved in the US, there are proposed biosimilars in development. Topics: Anemia; Animals; Biosimilar Pharmaceuticals; Commerce; Drug Approval; Drug Industry; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoiesis; Erythropoietin; Europe; Hematinics; History, 20th Century; History, 21st Century; Humans; Kidney; Kidney Diseases; Nephrology; Patient Safety; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Insufficiency, Chronic; United States | 2017 |
Increased progression to kidney fibrosis after erythropoietin is used as a treatment for acute kidney injury.
Treatment of renal ischemia-reperfusion (IR) injury with recombinant human erythropoietin (rhEPO) reduces acute kidney injury and improves function. We aimed to investigate whether progression to chronic kidney disease associated with acute injury was also reduced by rhEPO treatment, using in vivo and in vitro models. Rats were subjected to bilateral 40-min renal ischemia, and kidneys were studied at 4, 7, and 28 days postreperfusion for renal function, tubular injury and repair, inflammation, and fibrosis. Acute injury was modulated using rhEPO (1,000 or 5,000 IU/kg, intraperitoneally) at the time of reperfusion. Renal tubular epithelial cells or fibroblasts in culture were subjected to hypoxia or oxidative stress, with or without rhEPO (200 IU/ml), and fibrogenesis was studied. The results of the in vivo model confirmed functional and structural improvement with rhEPO at 4 days post-IR (P < 0.05). At 7 days post-IR, fibrosis and myofibroblast stimulation were increased with IR with and without rhEPO (P < 0.01). However, at 28 days post-IR, renal fibrosis and myofibroblast numbers were significantly greater with IR plus rhEPO (P < 0.01) compared with IR only. Mechanistically, rhEPO stimulated profibrotic transforming growth factor-β, oxidative stress (marker 8-hydroxy-deoxyguanosine), and phosphorylation of the signal transduction protein extracellular signal-regulated kinase. In vitro, rhEPO protected tubular epithelium from apoptosis but stimulated epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition and also protected and activated fibroblasts, particularly with oxidative stress. In summary, although rhEPO was protective of renal function and structure in acute kidney injury, the supraphysiological dose needed for renoprotection contributed to fibrogenesis and stimulated chronic kidney disease in the long term. Topics: Acute Kidney Injury; Animals; Apoptosis; Cells, Cultured; Disease Progression; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Extracellular Signal-Regulated MAP Kinases; Fibrosis; Humans; Kidney; Kidney Diseases; Male; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Recombinant Proteins; Reperfusion Injury; Treatment Outcome | 2014 |
Therapeutic impact of erythropoietin-encapsulated liposomes targeted to bone marrow on renal anemia.
Bone marrow is a key element in the diagnosis of disorders of erythropoiesis, including anemia, and a potential target in their treatment. However, because efficient delivery of diagnostic and therapeutic agents to bone marrow is difficult, such delivery is achieved by administering drugs in large quantities that often have adverse effects. Here, we achieved selective delivery of recombinant human erythropoietin (rHuEPO) to bone marrow, via its encapsulation in liposomes with l-glutamic acid, N-(3-carboxy-1-oxopropyl)-, 1,5-dihexadecyl ester (SA) (liposome-EPO). The result, in a rabbit model of renal anemia, was a beneficial effect on hematopoiesis, better than with rHuEPO alone. Also, we determined that liposome-EPO delivery to bone marrow depended on specific uptake by bone marrow macrophages because of the presence of SA. These results indicate both that liposome-EPO is a new, promising erythropoietin-stimulating agent and that liposomes with SA have potential for diagnostic and therapeutic applications in diseases originating from bone marrow. Topics: Anemia; Animals; Bone Marrow; Cells, Cultured; Drug Carriers; Drug Delivery Systems; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoiesis; Erythropoietin; Flow Cytometry; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Liposomes; Macrophages; Male; Rabbits; Recombinant Proteins | 2014 |
The relationship between depressive symptoms and erythropoietin resistance in stable hemodialysis patients with adequate iron stores.
Resistance to erythropoietin (EPO) treatment has been associated with inflammation and malnutrition in hemodialysis (HD) patients. Depression has also been associated with both inflammation and malnutrition; however, the specific relationship between depressive symptoms and EPO resistance is not known. In the current study, the relationship between depressive symptoms and EPO resistance as evaluated by erythropoiesis stimulating agent (ESA) hyporesponsiveness index (EHRI) was analyzed. . Study participants had their medical history taken and underwent physical examination; dialysis adequacy calculation, biochemical analysis and evaluation of depressive symptoms by Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) were performed. EHRI was calculated as the weekly dose of EPO divided by per kilogram of body weight divided by the hemoglobin level. . The mean BDI score of the patients was 10.99 ± 3.94. Pearson correlation analysis revealed that the logarithmically converted EHRI score was correlated with albumin (r = -0.270, p = 0.011), hs-CRP (r = 0.383, P<0.0001), hemoglobin (r = -0.617, p<0.0001), intact PTH (r = 0.215, p = 0.043) and logarithmically converted BDI (r = 0.299, p = 0.004). The stepwise linear regression analysis revealed that being female (p = 0.012), presence of diabetes mellitus (p = 0.119), hs-CRP (p = 0.009) and BDI score (p = 0.037) were independently related with logarithmically converted EHRI (as a dependent variable). . Depressive symptoms were independently related with EHRI in HD patients. Studies are needed to highlight underlying mechanisms between depression and EHRI. Topics: Adult; Aged; Anemia; Biomarkers; Cross-Sectional Studies; Depression; Drug Resistance; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Hematinics; Hemoglobins; Humans; Iron; Kidney Diseases; Linear Models; Male; Middle Aged; Psychiatric Status Rating Scales; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Dialysis; Risk Factors; Time Factors; Treatment Outcome | 2013 |
The US Food and Drug Administration's Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy (REMS) program in practice: does it really inform patients and limit risk?
Topics: Chronic Disease; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Heart Failure; Hematinics; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Patient Education as Topic; Physician-Patient Relations; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Dialysis; Risk Assessment; Risk Factors; Risk Management; Stroke; United States; United States Food and Drug Administration | 2012 |
Full results on risks of epoetin emerge 14 years after major dialysis study.
Topics: Anemia; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Hematinics; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Product Surveillance, Postmarketing; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Dialysis | 2012 |
The KDIGO anemia guideline: can reason triumph over regulation?
Topics: Anemia; Chronic Disease; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Hematinics; Hemoglobins; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Practice Guidelines as Topic; Quality of Life; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Dialysis; United States | 2012 |
Fewer dose changes with once-monthly C.E.R.A. in patients with chronic kidney disease.
Frequent dosing and requirements for dose adjustments of erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs) create significant burdens for healthcare providers and have been associated with hemoglobin (Hb) cycling, hampering maintenance of target Hb levels. We compared the frequency of dose changes in dialysis patients who received methoxy polyethylene glycolepoetin beta; (a continuous erythropoietin receptor activator (C.E.R.A.)) or a shorter-acting ESA.. Data were analyzed from three Phase III maintenance trials, using almost identical protocols, in dialysis patients treated with C.E.R.A. every 2 weeks (q2w) or every 4 weeks (q4w) or a comparator ESA (epoetin or darbepoetin alpha; at their previous dose/administration interval). Dosage was adjusted to maintain Hb ± 1 g/dl of baseline and 10 - 13.5 g/dl during titration (28 weeks) and evaluation (8 weeks), and 11 - 13 g/dl during follow-up (16 weeks).. Data were analyzed from 564 patients treated with C.E.R.A. q2w, 410 with C.E.R.A. q4w and 572 with comparator ESA at their usual dosing interval. Significantly fewer dose changes were needed in patients receiving C.E.R.A. q2w (p < 0.05) or C.E.R.A. q4w (p < 0.001) than in patients treated with comparator ESAs.. This retrospective analysis suggests that C.E.R.A. q4w maintains Hb levels in dialysis patients and requires fewer dose changes compared with other ESAs. Topics: Anemia; Chronic Disease; Clinical Trials, Phase III as Topic; Darbepoetin alfa; Drug Administration Schedule; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Hemoglobins; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Male; Middle Aged; Polyethylene Glycols; Recombinant Proteins | 2011 |
Erythropoiesis-stimulating agents in renal medicine.
The four currently available erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs), the main drugs for correcting anemia in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD), are epoetin alfa, epoetin beta, darbepoetin alfa, and continuous erythropoietin receptor activator. The last two have much longer half-lives, which means they can be administered less frequently. The expiry of the patents for epoetin alfa and epoetin beta some years ago opened up the way for the production of a number of biosimilars that are now marketed in the European Union. Because biosimilars cannot be identical to their originator, a complex and still-evolving regulatory policy has been generated, but there are still a number of issues concerning international naming, automatic substitution, and safety. All ESAs are effective in correcting renal anemia and increasing hemoglobin levels, but the choice of which to use should also take into account their pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics, their administration route, and economic issues. Following the publication of a number of trials indicating no benefit (and even possible harm) when ESAs are used to aim at near-normal hemoglobin levels in CKD patients, the hemoglobin target has become a major subject of discussion. According to the position statement of the Anemia Group of the European Renal Best Practice, it should generally be about 11-12 g/dL; however, a risk-benefit evaluation is warranted in individual patients, and high ESA doses driven by hyporesponsiveness should be avoided. Topics: Anemia; Chronic Disease; Darbepoetin alfa; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; European Union; Hematinics; Hemoglobins; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Polyethylene Glycols; Recombinant Proteins | 2011 |
Relationship between epoetin alfa dose and mortality: findings from a marginal structural model.
Observational studies relating epoetin alfa (EPO) dose and mortality frequently use analytic methods that do not control time-dependent confounding by indication (CBI). The relationship between EPO dose and 1-year mortality, adjusting for the effects of time-dependent CBI, was examined using a marginal structural model.. This retrospective cohort study included 27,791 hemodialysis patients between July 2000 and June 2002. Patients were grouped at successive 2-wk intervals into a zero-dose category or four nonzero-dose categories. Ordinal regression was used to calculate inverse probability of treatment weights of patients receiving their own dose level given their covariate and treatment history. Three treatment models with an increasing number of treatment predictors were evaluated to assess the effect of model specification. A small number of excessively large patient weights were truncated. Relative hazards for higher-dose groups compared with the lowest nonzero-dose group varied by treatment model specification and by level of weight truncation.. Results differed appreciably between the simplest treatment model, which incorporated only hemoglobin and EPO dosing history with 2% weight truncation (hazard ratio: 1.51; 95% confidence interval: 1.09, 1.89 for highest-dose patients), and the most comprehensive treatment model with 1% weight truncation (hazard ratio: 0.98; 95% confidence interval: 0.76, 1.74).. There is appreciable CBI at higher EPO doses, and EPO dose was not associated with increased mortality in marginal structural model analyses that more completely addressed this confounding. Topics: Adult; Aged; Biomarkers; Confounding Factors, Epidemiologic; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Hematinics; Hemoglobins; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Logistic Models; Male; Middle Aged; Models, Statistical; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Dialysis; Retrospective Studies; Risk Assessment; Risk Factors; Time Factors; Treatment Outcome; United States | 2010 |
Does TREAT give the boot to ESAs in the treatment of CKD anemia?
Topics: Anemia; Chronic Disease; Darbepoetin alfa; Epoetin Alfa; Erythrocytes; Erythropoietin; Hematinics; Hemoglobins; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic; Recombinant Proteins | 2010 |
Anemia treatment in chronic kidney disease accompanied by diabetes mellitus or congestive heart failure.
Anemia is common in chronic kidney disease (CKD). The CHOIR study found increased risk of a composite cardiovascular outcome when anemia was treated with epoetin-alfa to a target hemoglobin level of 13.5 as compared with 11.3 g/dl. Whether this increase applies to all patient subgroups equally is unclear. We discuss an analysis by Szczech and colleagues of the effects of the higher hemoglobin target in CKD patients with diabetes mellitus or congestive heart failure. Topics: Anemia; Chronic Disease; Diabetes Mellitus; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Heart Failure; Hemoglobins; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Recombinant Proteins | 2010 |
Iron, inflammation, dialysis adequacy, nutritional status, and hyperparathyroidism modify erythropoietic response.
The erythropoietic response in hemodialysis patients depends on several physiologic factors. Most epidemiologic studies include the effect of these factors by representing them as confounders. This study tested the hypothesis that iron stores, inflammation, dialysis adequacy, nutritional status, and hyperparathyroidism act as nonlinear effect modifiers of the erythropoietic response and quantified the magnitude of those effects over clinically relevant ranges.. The following retrospective data from 209 hemodialysis patients receiving Epoetin alfa (Epo) were collected: monthly: predialysis hemoglobin (Hgb), transferrin saturation, serum albumin, dialysis adequacy (Kt/V); quarterly: predialysis serum ferritin and intact parathyroid hormone over a period of 13 to 69 months. The study analyzed the dynamic relationship between hemoglobin and Epo, considering nonlinear effect modification by ferritin, transferrin saturation, Kt/V, albumin, and parathyroid hormone individually.. Maximum Hgb response to Epo was achieved for serum ferritin between 350 and 500 ng/ml, transferrin saturation greater than 30%, Kt/V greater than 1.4, and albumin greater than 3.8 g/dl. Hgb sensitivity to Epo decreases by about 30% as parathyroid hormone increases from 0 through 1000 pg/ml.. Serum ferritin, transferrin saturation, Kt/V, serum albumin, and intact parathyroid hormone are markers of nonlinear effect modification of the erythropoietic response in hemodialysis patients. Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Anemia; Biomarkers; Confounding Factors, Epidemiologic; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoiesis; Erythropoietin; Female; Ferritins; Hematinics; Hemoglobins; Humans; Hyperparathyroidism; Inflammation; Iron; Kidney Diseases; Likelihood Functions; Logistic Models; Male; Middle Aged; Nonlinear Dynamics; Nutritional Status; Parathyroid Hormone; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Dialysis; Retrospective Studies; Serum Albumin; Time Factors; Transferrin; Treatment Outcome; Young Adult | 2010 |
Evaluation of maintenance of stable haemoglobin levels in haemodialysis patients converting from epoetin or darbepoetin to monthly intravenous C.E.R.A.: the MIRACEL study.
C.E.R.A., a continuous erythropoietin receptor activator, offers once-monthly dosing without compromising haemoglobin control. This study was undertaken to examine whether monthly C.E.R.A. using pre-filled syringes maintains stable haemoglobin levels when administered according to local clinical judgement.. MIRACEL was a prospective, open-label, single-arm, multicentre study performed at 90 nephrology centres in Germany. After a 2-month screening phase, haemodialysis patients receiving epoetin or darbepoetin were converted to monthly intravenous C.E.R.A., with a 5-month titration phase followed by a 2-month evaluation phase.. Clinicaltrials.gov: NCT00413894 RESULTS: Of 661 patients screened, 424 (64.1%) started C.E.R.A. therapy (previous treatment: 72.2% epoetin, 27.8% darbepoetin); 416 were eligible for inclusion in the intent-to-treat population. A mean of two C.E.R.A. dose changes were required during the 7-month treatment period. The primary efficacy variable, haemoglobin within 11-12.5 g/dL or 10-13 g/dL during the evaluation phase, was achieved in 109 (30.8%) and 265 (74.9%) of the 354 evaluable patients, respectively, with no differences observed between patients formerly receiving epoetin or darbepoetin or different dosing frequencies. During the screening, titration and evaluation phases, mean haemoglobin was 11.7 +/- 0.7 g/dL, 11.6 +/- 0.9 g/dL and 11.4 +/- 1.0 g/dL, respectively, and 90.6% (377/416), 70.4% (293/416) and 82.9% (345/416) of patients exhibited < or = 1 g/dL change from phase-specific individual means. C.E.R.A. was well-tolerated with a safety profile similar to that reported in phase III studies.. In this single-arm, open-label, multicentre study, conversion of a large population of haemodialysis patients from epoetin or darbepoetin to monthly C.E.R.A. administration using pre-filled syringes was shown to be practical, convenient and offer good control of haemoglobin levels, regardless of the previous type of therapy or dosing frequency. Topics: Darbepoetin alfa; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Hemoglobins; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Dialysis | 2010 |
Estimate of maintenance EPO to darbepoetin alfa dose conversion ratio in a hospital-based dialysis patient population.
Epoetin alfa (EPO) and darbepoetin alfa are erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs) used to treat anemia in patients with chronic kidney disease. EPO and darbepoetin alfa have a non-proportional dose conversion relationship across the dosing spectrum. However, reports comparing the dose relationship between the two ESAs do not adjust for the non-proportional dose relationship or for population differences. Because drug cost is directly related to dosage, appropriate methods to assess the dose relationship between the two ESAs are important to understand the economic implications of converting patient populations from one ESA treatment to another.. To describe dose conversion methods that take into account the non-proportional dose relationship between EPO and darbepoetin alfa, and calculate the dose conversion ratio (DCR) between the two ESAs in a hospital-based dialysis patient population.. This was a retrospective observational study where longitudinal data from medical charts were collected for chronic hemodialysis patients being treated at hospital-based dialysis centers. Mean maintenance DCRs were calculated at the population level for hemodialysis patients converted from EPO to darbepoetin alfa treatment and subsequently maintained on darbepoetin alfa. Two methods were used to determine the DCRs: a regression-based method using ordinary least squares regression, and ratio-based method using an arithmetic mean.. The estimated population mean maintenance DCR for the population in this analysis was 320:1 (Units EPO:µg darbepoetin alfa) using the regression-based method, and 350:1 using the ratio-based method. Sensitivity analysis yielded DCRs ranging from 311 to 333:1.. The two methods in estimating the DCR presented here provide payers with an empirical way of comparing ESA utilization for pharmacoeconomic evaluation. DCR results may vary according to patient characteristics; however, mean DCRs of greater than 300:1 were obtained in this analysis. Exclusion of other patient-related factors that may influence ESA dose is a possible limitation of the study. Topics: Adult; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Anemia; Darbepoetin alfa; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Economics, Pharmaceutical; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Hematinics; Hemodialysis Units, Hospital; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Male; Medical Audit; Middle Aged; Recombinant Proteins; Regression Analysis; Retrospective Studies; Young Adult | 2010 |
Effect of Epoetin alfa dose changes on hemoglobin and mortality in hemodialysis patients with hemoglobin levels persistently below 11 g/dL.
The mortality risk associated with attempting to raise hemoglobin (Hb) levels by increasing Epoetin alfa (EPO) doses in hemodialysis patients with persistently low Hb remains poorly understood. Design, setting, participants, & measurements. We included hemodialysis patients from a large dialysis provider between July 2000 and June 2001 who had EPO dose and Hb data for 6 consecutive months, and a mean Hb <11 g/dl in months 4 to 6 (sub-11 period). We identify predictors of EPO dose changes during the sub-11 period; evaluate the proportion of patients achieving a Hb >or=11 g/dl after the sub-11 period by dose-change categories; and evaluate the association between EPO dose changes and mortality risk.. Patients were more likely to receive greater EPO dose increases if they had lower EPO doses, higher Hb levels, or were recently hospitalized. Greater EPO dose increases elevated the likelihood of achieving an Hb >or=11 g/dl in the subsequent 3 mo. Larger EPO dose changes over the sub-11 period were not associated with an elevated mortality risk, but having an Hb <9 g/dl at the end of that period independent of dose change was associated with mortality risk. We found that patients receiving larger dose changes and whose resulting Hb level remained <9.5 g/dl at the end of the 3 mo were at elevated mortality risk.. In patients with persistently low Hb levels, mortality risk was strongly associated with the patient's ability to achieve a hematopoietic response rather than the magnitude of EPO dose titrations. Topics: Adult; Aged; Anemia, Iron-Deficiency; Biomarkers; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Hematinics; Hemoglobins; Humans; Kaplan-Meier Estimate; Kidney Diseases; Male; Middle Aged; Proportional Hazards Models; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Dialysis; Retrospective Studies; Risk Assessment; Risk Factors; Time Factors; Treatment Outcome | 2009 |
Erythropoietin stimulating agents and epoetin alfa revisited: what's really relevant?
Topics: Anemia; Chronic Disease; Drug Administration Schedule; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoiesis; Erythropoietin; Hematinics; Hematocrit; Hemoglobins; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Patient Selection; Recombinant Proteins; Treatment Outcome | 2008 |
Racial differences in erythropoietin responsiveness.
Topics: Anemia; Black or African American; Chronic Disease; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Hematinics; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Recombinant Proteins; White People | 2008 |
DRIVE it home: making the case for prospective economic data collection in randomized clinical trials.
Although the results of Pizzi et al. point to the potential economic attractiveness of a ferric gluconate treatment strategy, they may not be sufficient to change public policy and reimbursement practices. What is required is a large, simple trial that will replicate the results of the DRIVE trial in a broader population with longer follow-up and a prospectively defined economic and quality-of-life study conducted from the societal perspective. Topics: Drug Costs; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Ferric Compounds; Health Care Costs; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic; Recombinant Proteins | 2008 |
Ferric gluconate treatment provides cost savings in patients with high ferritin and low transferrin saturation.
A subgroup of hemodialysis patients experience high serum ferritin and low tansferrin saturation for reasons not clearly understood. Here we determined the economic impact of administering sodium ferric gluconate complex to patients with serum ferritin levels higher than 500 ng/ml and a transferrin saturation less than 25% based on the Dialysis Patients Response to IV Iron with Elevated Ferritin (DRIVE) study and its extension, DRIVE II. A cost effectiveness model was developed, consistent with the DRIVE studies, using decision analysis with a 12-week time horizon. The primary effectiveness measure was the mean hemoglobin increase in the intent to treat patient groups comparing epoetin with or without sodium ferric gluconate complex. Costs were computed using projected 2007 US Medicare reimbursements for the treatments and for serious adverse events, with the effectiveness factored by the increase in hemoglobin. The net savings for sodium ferric gluconate complex plus epoetin treatment was $1390 compared to epoetin alone for each g/dl hemoglobin increase over 12 weeks of study. Sensitivity analyses were performed to test the impact of change in the variables (using medians or means and actual 2005 or projected 2007 Medicare reimbursements) and these affirmed the robustness of the model. Our study shows that treatment of patients with high ferritin and low transferrin saturation levels, as defined in DRIVE, with sodium ferric gluconate complex and epoetin resulted in significant savings compared to epoetin alone. Topics: Adult; Aged; Algorithms; Anemia; Cost Savings; Drug Costs; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Ferric Compounds; Ferritins; Hematinics; Hemoglobins; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Medicare; Middle Aged; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Dialysis; United States | 2008 |
Epoetin use and Kidney Disease Outcomes Quality Initiative hemoglobin targets in patients returning to dialysis with failed renal transplants.
Patients with failed renal transplants represent an increasing proportion of the current dialysis population. Although their risk of anemia might be expected to be high, whether these patients receive adequate anemia therapy after returning to dialysis is unknown. We studied intravenous iron use, epoetin doses, and hemoglobin levels in patients with and without failed renal transplants who survived for 6 months after initiation of dialysis in the United States between 1996 and 2001. Of the study population (n=220 557), 9922 (4.5%) had failed renal transplants. In spite of a greater likelihood of receiving intravenous iron therapy (adjusted odds ratio (AOR) 1.47, P<0.0001) and epoetin (AOR 1.57, P<0.0001), patients with failed transplants were more anemic and had higher epoetin doses in each month of follow-up. During month 6, patients with failed transplants were more likely to have hemoglobin levels below 11 g/dl (AOR 1.50, P<0.0001) and to have epoetin-to-hemoglobin ratios above the population median of 1030 U/week per g/dl (AOR 1.73, P<0.0001). Patients who return to dialysis with failed transplants are at a higher risk of anemia than other patients who start dialysis; the pattern of lower hemoglobin levels and higher ratios of epoetin-to-hemoglobin suggests that relative epoetin resistance may be contributory. Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Anemia; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Graft Rejection; Hemoglobins; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Kidney Transplantation; Middle Aged; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Dialysis; Treatment Outcome | 2007 |
Epoetin alfa once every 2 weeks is effective for initiation of treatment of anemia of chronic kidney disease.
There are limited data suggesting that initiation of epoetin alfa at extended dosing intervals of every 2, 3, or 4 wk may be efficacious for treating anemia in patients who have chronic kidney disease and are not on dialysis (CKD-NOD). This open-label, multicenter, single-arm study investigated the efficacy of administration of 20,000 IU of epoetin alfa once every 2 wk as initiation therapy in these patients. Adults with CKD-NOD were eligible when they had hemoglobin (Hb) <11 g/dl, GFR of 10 to 60 ml/min per 1.73 m2, and stable serum creatinine for the past 6 mo. Patients received 20,000 IU of epoetin alfa subcutaneously every 2 wk for up to 27 wk, with dosage adjustments permitted after 4 wk of treatment. The primary efficacy end point was the proportion of patients with Hb response, defined as achievement of the target Hb range of 11 to 12 g/dl for at least two consecutive visits. Sixty-seven patients were enrolled; >88% (59 of 67) of patients achieved an Hb response. Mean Hb increased to the targeted range by week 6 and remained in the range through week 28. Hb increases of 1 and 2 g/dl were observed in 91 and 78% of patients, respectively. Epoetin Alfa was well tolerated; most adverse events were mild or moderate in nature and typical of the CKD patient population. In this study, results demonstrated that epoetin alfa can be initiated safely and effectively at an extended dosing interval of 20,000 IU every 2 wk in patients with CKD-NOD. Topics: Aged; Anemia; Chronic Disease; Drug Administration Schedule; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Hematinics; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Male; Recombinant Proteins | 2007 |
Dose and cost comparison of erythropoietic agents in the inpatient hospital setting.
The inpatient dosing patterns and treatment costs in cancer and predialysis chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients treated with erythropoietic agents from a hospital pharmacy perspective were studied.. An analysis of electronic inpatient records from the Premier Perspective comparative hospital database was conducted. Study participants were identified through hospitalizations recorded between July 2002 and March 2005 from over 500 hospitals nationwide. Adult patients with an admitting diagnosis of cancer or predialysis CKD and treated with epoetin alfa or darbepoetin alfa during hospitalization were included. Patients who had received renal dialysis or both agents during a hospitalization were excluded. Wholesale acquisition costs from September 2006 were used to calculate drug costs.. A total of 25,645 hospitalized patients with cancer (22,873 received epoetin alfa; 2,772 received darbepoetin alfa) and 66,822 hospitalized patients with CKD (60,079 received epoetin alfa; 6,743 received darbepoetin alfa) were identified. The mean cumulative dose per hospitalization resulted in dose ratios of 245:1 and 242:1 (units epoetin alfa:micrograms darbepoetin alfa) for cancer and CKD patients, respectively. On the basis of the cumulative dose per hospitalization, drug costs for darbepoetin alfa-treated patients were approximately 50% higher than drug costs for epoetin alfa-treated patients for both oncology and CKD patients.. Epoetin alfa was associated with less cost compared with darbepoetin alfa for treating inpatients with cancer or CKD. Further research including the patients' clinical outcomes is necessary to determine the true pharmacoeconomic differences between the two agents. Topics: Adult; Aged; Anemia; Cohort Studies; Darbepoetin alfa; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Health Care Costs; Humans; Inpatients; Kidney Diseases; Male; Middle Aged; Neoplasms; Pharmacy Service, Hospital; Recombinant Proteins; Retrospective Studies | 2007 |
Novel evidence suggesting an anti-oxidant property for erythropoietin on vancomycin-induced nephrotoxicity in a rat model.
1. The aim of the present study was to investigate the role of oxidative stress in renal injury and to determine whether erythropoietin (EPO) acts as an anti-oxidant in vancomycin (VCM)-induced renal impairment. 2. Twenty-four rats were divided into three groups as follows: (i) control (Group 1); (ii) VCM treated (Group 2); and (iii) VCM + EPO treated (Group 3). Vancomycin (200 mg/kg, i.p.) was administered to Groups 2 and 3 for 7 days. Erythropoietin (150 IU/kg, i.p.) treatment was started 24 h before VCM and lasted for 7 days. On Day 8, renal tissues were excised and blood samples were collected. Serum creatinine and blood urea nitrogen were measured, along with renal malondialdehyde (MDA) levels, superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase (CAT) activity and tissue VCM levels. The kidneys were examined for any histopathological changes. 3. Renal MDA levels were found to be increased, whereas SOD and CAT activity was decreased, in the VCM-treated group compared with the control group. There was a marked decrease in MDA levels and an increase in SOD activity, but not CAT activity, after VCM + EPO treatment. Marked histopathological alterations, including interstitial oedema, tubular dilatation, tubular epithelial cell desquamation and vacuolization, were observed in VCM-treated rats. Histopathological changes were significantly improved after EPO administration. 4. In conclusion, the present data suggest that oxidative stress plays an important role in VCM-induced nephrotoxicity. Erythropoietin seems to act as an anti-oxidant, diminishing the toxic oxidative effects of VCM on renal tissues. Topics: Animals; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Antioxidants; Blood Urea Nitrogen; Catalase; Creatinine; Disease Models, Animal; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Kidney; Kidney Diseases; Male; Malondialdehyde; Oxidative Stress; Rats; Rats, Wistar; Recombinant Proteins; Superoxide Dismutase; Vancomycin | 2007 |
Perihospitalization hemoglobin-epoetin associations in U.S. hemodialysis patients, 1998 to 2003.
While hospitalization is common for hemodialysis patients, perihospitalization associations between hemoglobin levels and epoetin doses are not well characterized. U.S. Medicare claims were used to identify 71,360 hemodialysis patients hospitalized from 1998 to 2003. Hemoglobin levels, epoetin doses, and epoetin responsiveness index (ERI) were compared by calendar year. In the prehospitalization month, the mean hemoglobin levels increased from 10.96 g/dL in 1998 to 11.76 in 2003 and the mean epoetin doses from 63,715 to 75,012 U; corresponding values in the hospitalization month were 10.53 and 11.19 g/dL, and 66,623 and 80,569 U. In each year, prehospitalization hemoglobin levels were achieved within 2 months, but ERI declined to prehospitalization levels within 12 months only in 2000. With mixed models, hemoglobin declines in the 3 prehospitalization months grew between 1998 (-0.1362 g/dL/month) and 2003 (-0.2003 g/dL/month). Epoetin responsiveness index slopes were J-shaped, with values of 287.9, 221.1, and 356.5U/month per g/dL in 1998, 2000, and 2003. In the 3 postadmission months, a modest increase in the rapidity of hemoglobin recovery was seen (+0.2538 g/dL/month in 1998, +0.2743 in 2003), with increasing rates of ERI change (+8.7 U/month/g/dL in 1998, +146.8 in 2003). While time to recovery of prehospitalization hemoglobin levels remained constant year to year, epoetin doses and ERI did not, suggesting that optimum perihospitalization anemia management practices have yet to be determined. Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Anemia; Child; Child, Preschool; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Hemoglobins; Hospitalization; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Kidney Diseases; Male; Middle Aged; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Dialysis; Renal Replacement Therapy; Treatment Outcome; United States | 2007 |
Dosing intervals and hemoglobin control in patients with chronic kidney disease and anemia treated with epoetin alfa or darbepoetin alfa: a retrospective cohort study.
Anemia is a common complication of chronic kidney disease (CKD). The approved dosing interval for currently available erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs) is 2 to 3 times weekly for epoetin alfa (EPO) and every 1 to 2 weeks for darbepoetin alfa (DARB). However, clinicians sometimes use less frequent dosing in the interest of convenience.. This study investigated patterns of actual ESA use (doses and dosing intervals) and hemoglo- bin (Hb) control in adult outpatients with CKD not requiring dialysis at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation anemia clinic. The distribution of and variability in Hb levels in these patients were also examined.. The clinical charts and electronic records of adult outpatients with CKD who initiated ESA therapy before March 2005 were reviewed to identify the initial, dominant (used for the longest consecutive period), and final dosing intervals and mean weekly doses of EPO and DARB. Hb control was examined in terms of maximum deviations >12 g/dL and <11 g/dL, and the proportions of measurements outside these values.. The analysis included data from 111 outpatients (mean [SD] age, 65.9 [14.4] years; 53.2% male; 66.7% white, 29.7% black, 2.7% other, 0.9% unknown ethnicity). Twenty-one patients received EPO only, 74 received DARB only, and 16 switched ESAs. The mean duration of follow-up was 20.5 months. The most common initial dosing intervals were qwk for EPO (66.7%) and q2wk for DARB (90.5%). The dominant dosing intervals were q2wk in 61.9% of EPO patients and q3wk in 62.3% of DARB patients. However, 80.0% of those who received EPO q2wk and 63.2% of those who received DARB q3wk eventually returned to their initial dosing intervals. The largest proportions of Hb mea- surements <11 g/dL occurred at dominant dosing intervals of qwk for EPO and q2wk for DARB (both, 46.0%; 11 and 26 patients, respectively), whereas the largest proportions of measurements >12 g/dL occurred with EPO dosed at q2wk (44.0%; 5 patients) and DARB dosed at >q4wk (62.0%; 5 patients).. The patterns of ESA usage in adult outpatients with CKD at this center indicated that clinicians extended dosing intervals beyond those in the approved prescribing information. However, variations in Hb concentrations occurred during maintenance therapy administered at extended dosing intervals, resulting in the resumption of shorter dosing intervals in the majority of patients. Topics: Aged; Anemia; Chronic Disease; Cohort Studies; Darbepoetin alfa; Drug Administration Schedule; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Hematinics; Hemoglobins; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Male; Recombinant Proteins; Retrospective Studies | 2007 |
Should all patients with chronic kidney disease receive an EPO-type drug?
Topics: Anemia; Chronic Disease; Darbepoetin alfa; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Hematinics; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Practice Guidelines as Topic; Recombinant Proteins | 2006 |
Effectiveness of weekly darbepoetin alfa in the treatment of anaemia of HIV-infected haemodialysis patients.
Anaemia is aggravated by the coexistence of chronic kidney disease (CKD) in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Darbepoetin alfa effectively alleviates CKD-associated anaemia with less frequent dosing than recombinant human erythropoietin (EPO). The current study aimed to determine the efficacy, safety and cost-effectiveness of darbepoetin alfa compared with erythropoietin alfa (EPO-alfa) for treatment of anaemia in HIV-infected subjects receiving haemodialysis.. An open label, single arm, prospective study of 12 haemodialysis subjects with HIV infection was conducted for a duration of 6 months after switching from intravenous (i.v.) EPO-alfa two/three times weekly to i.v. darbepoetin alfa once weekly. The primary end point was the proportion of patients maintaining haemoglobin (Hb) levels>or=11 g/dl while a weekly dose of darbepoetin alfa was a secondary end point.. Darbepoetin alfa, as effectively as EPO-alfa maintained the proportion of the subjects having Hb levels>or=11 g/dl at an average weekly dose of 40.60 microg compared with an equivalent dose of 51.84 microg for EPO-alfa. Antiretroviral therapy and HIV infection stage remained the same for each specific patient throughout the study period, including the last 6 months of EPO-alfa therapy. No difference in the incidence of adverse effects was observed after switching from EPO-alfa to darbepoietin alfa.. Lower doses of darbepoetin alfa at extended dosing interval is as safe and effective as EPO-alfa for treating anaemia, suggesting that darbepoetin alfa is a more cost-effective therapeutic alternative to EPO-alfa in the management of anaemia associated with HIV infection in subjects receiving haemodialysis. Topics: Adult; Anemia; Darbepoetin alfa; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Drug Administration Schedule; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Hematinics; HIV Infections; Humans; Injections, Intravenous; Kidney Diseases; Middle Aged; Prospective Studies; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Dialysis | 2006 |
Relationship between hemoglobin level and quality of life in anemic patients with chronic kidney disease receiving epoetin alfa.
To evaluate the relationship between hemoglobin (Hb) level and quality of life (QOL) in anemic patients with non-dialysis chronic kidney disease receiving epoetin alfa.. A post-hoc analysis using data from a multicenter, open-label, prospective study of epoetin alfa for anemia in patients with chronic kidney disease not on dialysis was conducted. The relationship between Hb and QOL was analyzed using correlation and longitudinal analyses, the latter adjusting for sample selection bias. The Linear Analog Scale Assessment (LASA) and the Kidney Disease Questionnaire (KDQ) subscales were used to measure QOL. The impact of an incremental 1 g/dL increase in Hb level on LASA and KDQ scores was determined using an incremental analysis.. A total of 1183 and 1044 patients formed the study populations for the LASA and KDQ analyses, respectively. There was a positive and significant relationship between Hb levels and QOL (p < 0.05). Using non-linear regression analysis, we characterized the sigmoid-shape of the relationship between Hb levels and QOL scores. Hemoglobin change was a statistically significant determinant of QOL improvement for both LASA and KDQ scales (p < 0.05). The model predicted that, based on a 2 unit change in Hb, the greatest incremental QOL improvement per unit of Hb increase occurred when Hb was in the range of 11 to 12 g/dL.. This study demonstrates that, beyond the well-known relationship between Hb increases and QOL improvements, the maximal incremental gain in QOL occurred when Hb reached 11 to 12 g/dL. This suggests that treating anemic patients with non-dialysis chronic kidney disease until their Hb level reaches 12 g/dL will result in the greatest QOL improvement per Hb unit increase. The analyses were conducted based on an open-label study of epoetin alfa and could be further validated using a randomized, controlled trial, comparing incremental gains in QOL associated with treatment initiation at varying levels of Hb across arms. Topics: Aged; Anemia; Chronic Disease; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Hematinics; Hemoglobins; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Male; Middle Aged; Quality of Life; Recombinant Proteins | 2006 |
Reactions to Eprex's adverse reactions.
Topics: Animals; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Humans; Incidence; Kidney Diseases; Mice; Ovalbumin; Recombinant Proteins; Red-Cell Aplasia, Pure; Structure-Activity Relationship | 2006 |
Inflammation and resistance to treatment with recombinant human erythropoietin.
Despite an increase in the use and average dose of recombinant human EPO (rh-EPO) over the last 15 years, a substantial percentage of patients still do not achieve hemoglobin targets recommended by international guidelines. The definition of rh-EPO resistance has been introduced to identify those patients in whom the target hemoglobin level is not attained despite a greater-than-usual dose of erythropoietin-stimulating agent (ESA). In recent years, increasing attention has been paid to the relationship between dialysis, increased inflammatory stimulus, malnutrition, and ESA response. About 35% to 65% of hemodialysis patients show signs of inflammation that could be a cause of anemia through the suppression of bone marrow erythropoiesis by a number of cytokines. A large proportion of chronic kidney disease patients also have protein-energy malnutrition and wasting; low serum albumin levels, together with other more specific nutritional markers, are predictors of rh-EPO response. A diminished nutritional state could then be a feature of patients who are resistant to ESA treatment, with malnutrition probably being a consequence of a chronic inflammatory state. Starting from the hypothesis that anemia, partially attributable to a reduced response to ESA, could be the link among malnutrition, inflammation, and the poor outcome of chronic kidney disease patients, we designed a multicenter observational study, the Malnutrition-Inflammation-Resistance-Treatment Outcome Study (MIRTOS), aimed at evaluating the impact and possible causes of resistance to ESA in a large sample of hemodialysis patients. We hope the results of MIRTOS will represent a step forward toward a better understanding of the factors influencing the response to ESA in hemodialysis patients. Topics: Anemia; Chronic Disease; Darbepoetin alfa; Drug Resistance; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Hemoglobins; Humans; Inflammation; Kidney Diseases; Kidney Failure, Chronic; Malnutrition; Protein-Energy Malnutrition; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Dialysis | 2005 |
Patterns of medication use in the RRI-CKD study: focus on medications with cardiovascular effects.
Patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) stages 2-5 are known to suffer numerous complications and co-morbidities associated with kidney disease. The medication prescription patterns in this population are not well understood. We report on prescription data collected as part of a multicentre longitudinal study in patients with CKD, with a focus on medications with cardiovascular or cardioprotective effects.. Patients were recruited from four academic nephrology centres in the USA, with patient recruitment from June 2000 to March 2002. Medication data were captured at the time of first enrollment into the study. Individual medications were classified into medication groups, and those with predominant cardioprotective effects or for prevention of progression of kidney disease (e.g. medications for treatment of anaemia, lipid-lowering agents, antihypertensives, statins, etc.) were recorded for analysis. Descriptive statistics were used for medication prescription according to baseline demographics and co-morbidities. Predictors of epoetin and iron use were determined by logistic regression adjusting for age, race, sex, diabetes, glomerular filtration rate (GFR), haemoglobin and serum albumin.. Medication data were available for 619 patients with stages 2-5 CKD. Patients were 60.6+/-16.0 years of age, and were prescribed 8+/-4 (range 1-28) medications. Overall, the proportion of patients prescribed different classes of medications included epoetin (20%), intravenous iron (13%), HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors (16%), angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors (44%), angiotensin receptor blockers (13%), beta-blockers (46%), calcium channel blockers (52%) and aspirin (37%). There was a low use of epoetin (45%) and iron (20%) in patients with anaemia. Only 24% of patients with coronary artery disease were prescribed statins, and ACE inhibitors and angiotensin receptor blockers were used in only 58 and 23% of diabetic patients with proteinuria. Positive predictors of epoetin and iron therapy included white race and diabetes. Higher GFR and higher serum albumin were associated with lower odds of being prescribed epoetin. White race and diabetics were more likely to be prescribed iron.. This study provides an overview of prescription practices in a cohort of CKD patients. Substantial underutilization of certain classes of cardioprotective medications is apparent, and systematic educational efforts in this direction may well prove worthwhile to impact outcomes. Topics: Aged; Cardiovascular Diseases; Chronic Disease; Drug Utilization; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Glomerular Filtration Rate; Hematinics; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Logistic Models; Middle Aged; Recombinant Proteins | 2005 |
Long-term outcome of individuals with pure red cell aplasia and antierythropoietin antibodies in patients treated with recombinant epoetin: a follow-up report from the Research on Adverse Drug Events and Reports (RADAR) Project.
Since its introduction in 1988, recombinant human erythropoietin (epoetin) has been standard treatment for patients with anemia due to chronic kidney disease. From 1998 to 2004, nearly 200 epoetin-treated persons with chronic kidney disease developed antibodies to epoetin, resulting in pure red cell aplasia (PRCA). The majority of these patients received Eprex, an epoetin alfa product marketed exclusively outside the United States. Herein, we report on the long-term outcome of these individuals. For 170 chronic kidney disease patients who developed epoetin-associated PRCA and had 3 months or more follow-up information available, case reports from the Food and Drug Administration and epoetin manufacturers were reviewed for information on clinical characteristics of the patients, immunosuppressive treatments, epoetin responsiveness, and hematologic recovery. Overall, 64% of the PRCA patients received immunosuppressive therapy, including 19 who also underwent a renal transplantation. Thirty-seven percent experienced a hematologic recovery, with higher hematologic recovery rates among PRCA patients who received immunosuppressive therapy (57% vs 2%, P < .001). Among 34 patients who received epoetin after the onset of PRCA, 56% regained epoetin responsiveness. The highest rates of epoetin responsiveness were observed among persons whose antierythropoietin antibodies were undetectable when epoetin was administered (89%). Among chronic kidney disease patients with epoetin-associated PRCA, epoetin discontinuation and immunosuppressive therapy or renal transplantation is necessary for hematologic recovery. Reinitiation of epoetin therapy among individuals could be considered if antierythropoietin antibodies are undetectable. Topics: Autoantibodies; Chronic Disease; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Hematinics; Humans; Immunosuppression Therapy; Kidney Diseases; Kidney Transplantation; Male; Recombinant Proteins; Red-Cell Aplasia, Pure; Retrospective Studies; Treatment Outcome; United States; United States Food and Drug Administration | 2005 |
Darbepoetin alfa therapeutic interchange protocol for anemia in dialysis.
Erythropoiesis-stimulating proteins, such as erythropoietin alfa and darbepoetin alfa, have positively impacted anemia management. These medications improve patient outcomes and quality of life. Their costs, however, remain a major barrier for health systems.. To evaluate the development, implementation, and cost-effectiveness of an inpatient therapeutic interchange protocol for erythropoiesis-stimulating proteins at a large, tertiary care, university-affiliated health system.. Virginia Commonwealth University Health System (VCUHS) developed and implemented a therapeutic interchange program to convert therapy for all inpatients undergoing dialysis from erythropoietin alfa to darbepoetin alfa for treatment of chronic kidney disease-related anemia. An evaluation of the economic impact of this program on drug expenditures over a fiscal quarter (2003) was conducted using historical comparator data (2002).. Preliminary evaluation of the program demonstrated cost-savings and reduced drug utilization of erythropoiesis-stimulating proteins in hospitalized dialysis patients. For the first quarter of 2003 compared with the first quarter of 2002, VCUHS realized a cost-savings of nearly 10,000 US dollars, which was related to the program's aggressive screening procedure. When these data were normalized for equal numbers of patients in each group receiving one of the drugs, the actual cost-savings was over 2000 US dollars. These cost-savings are largely due to reduced utilization of these expensive biotechnology products with implementation of a dosing protocol.. VCUHS has successfully developed and implemented a darbepoetin alfa therapeutic interchange protocol for hospitalized dialysis patients. This has translated into reduced use of erythropoiesis-stimulating proteins, resulting in cost-savings for the health system. Topics: Anemia; Chronic Disease; Clinical Protocols; Costs and Cost Analysis; Darbepoetin alfa; Drug Administration Schedule; Drug Utilization Review; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Hemoglobins; Hospitals, University; Humans; Injections, Intravenous; Kidney Diseases; Length of Stay; Male; Middle Aged; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Dialysis; Therapeutic Equivalency; Virginia | 2005 |
Hypothesis versus association: the optimal hemoglobin target debate.
Topics: Anemia; Bias; Biomarkers; Chronic Disease; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Goals; Hemoglobins; Humans; Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular; Kidney Diseases; Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic; Recombinant Proteins; Reference Values; Research Design; Treatment Outcome | 2005 |
Cost-minimization analysis of darbepoetin alfa versus epoetin alfa in the hospital setting.
The cost of darbepoetin alfa versus that of epoetin alfa in a hospital setting was studied.. The study was an observational, retrospective review of the hospitalwide use of darbepoetin and epoetin during hospital admissions beginning in the period from January 2003 through April 2003. After the identification from daily charge reports of patients who used at least one of the study drugs during an admission, charts were requested for review. Drug product costs were determined from hospital purchasing information. Material and labor costs were combined to estimate drug administration costs. Total costs were calculated as the sum of drug product costs and administration costs.. A total of 429 epoetin records and 80 darbepoetin records were included. The two cohorts were similar with respect to demographic characteristics. With respect to costs, the only significant difference between cohorts was in daily administration costs, which were lower for patients receiving darbepoetin. Sensitivity analysis found lower costs for darbepoetin only after the dose-conversion ratio (DCR) was increased to above 256.74 units:1 microg. The overall DCR based on the median daily dose of each drug was 244.90 units:1 microg.. A cost-minimization study in a hospital showed no cost difference between treatment with epoetin and darbepoetin. Topics: Anemia; Darbepoetin alfa; Drug Costs; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Hemoglobins; Hospital Costs; Hospitals; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Length of Stay; Neoplasms; Recombinant Proteins | 2005 |
Predialysis Survey on Anemia Management: patient referral.
The Predialysis Survey on Anemia Management was designed to assess the care given to predialysis patients within 3 months of the start of hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis (PD) therapy. In this presentation, we focus on demographic data and patient referral practices of patients who enter kidney centers.. We conducted a retrospective chart review of patients who had started hemodialysis or PD therapy between August 1999 and April 2000. All patients (age, 16 to 99 years) who entered 1 of the 779 centers in 21 European countries, Israel, or South Africa were included, except those for whom dialysis therapy was only started during an acute episode. Demographic characteristics, referral to kidney centers, comorbidities, drug treatments, major clinical events, and use of epoetin were documented.. Mean creatinine clearance rate at the first visit to the kidney center was 18.2 mL/min (0.303 mL/s). Of all patients, greater than 35% had a creatinine clearance less than 10.0 mL/min (<0.167 mL/s) at their first visit. Overall, 87% of patients were initiated on hemodialysis therapy, and 13% were started on PD therapy. PD was used more often the longer a patient was under the care of a nephrologist. Of 4,333 new dialysis patients, 68% had a hemoglobin concentration of 11.0 g/dL or less (< or =110 g/L) at the first visit.. The majority of patients in the survey had been under the care of a nephrologist for more than 12 months before the start of dialysis therapy. Nevertheless, most of these patients were anemic, and only a minority were on epoetin treatment. Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Anemia; Chronic Disease; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; European Union; Female; Health Care Surveys; Hemoglobins; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Male; Middle Aged; Peritoneal Dialysis; Practice Guidelines as Topic; Recombinant Proteins; Referral and Consultation; Renal Dialysis; Retrospective Studies | 2003 |
Is the evidence for high hematocrit targets valid?
Topics: Clinical Trials as Topic; Confounding Factors, Epidemiologic; Drug Administration Schedule; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Hematocrit; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Recombinant Proteins; Selection Bias | 2003 |
Incidence of anaemia, and use of epoetin therapy in pre-dialysis patients: a prospective study in 403 patients.
Recent American and European guidelines recommend that epoetin therapy should be considered whenever the blood haemoglobin (Hb) level is <10-11 g/dl in dialysis patients and in pre-dialysis patients. Thus, data on the current prevalence of anaemia with respect to the degree of chronic renal insufficiency are needed in order to determine the potential indications of epoetin therapy in the pre-dialysis period.. We prospectively studied 403 consecutive ambulatory pre-dialysis patients whose serum creatinine (Scr) was 200 micro mol/l or more at their first passage at our out-patient clinic between January 1 and June 30, 1999. Hb and Scr values were determined at each visit until June 30, 2000, or until the start of maintenance dialysis. Patients had a clinical and laboratory evaluation every 2-3 months, and monthly when treated with epoetin.. The mean (+/-SD) age of patients was 60.9+/-17.2 years at presentation. The Hb level was <11 g/dl in 62% of patients with Scr > or =400 micro mol/l, and in 58% of patients with an estimated creatinine clearance (Ccr) <20 ml/min/1.73 m(2). The proportion of anaemic patients was higher for any given Ccr value in females than in males. A total of 136 patients were treated with epoetin during the observation period. At the start of epoetin, their mean Hb value was 9.5+/-0.6 g/dl and Ccr level 13.9+/-4.9 ml/min/1.73 m(2). Among the 123 patients who began maintenance dialysis therapy during the observation period, 85 (or 69%) received epoetin therapy before the start of dialysis. Their mean Hb value at the start of dialysis was 10.8+/-1 g/dl compared with 10.5+/-1.1 g/dl in the 41 dialysed patients who did not require epoetin therapy during the pre-dialysis period.. Based on the data gained in a large cohort of patients receiving regular pre-dialysis nephrological care, the proportion of subjects with a Hb level <11 g/dl may be estimated at approximately 60% when the Ccr is <20 ml/min/1.73 m(2). If the Hb level is to be maintained at no less than 11 g/dl, at least two-thirds of patients at this advanced stage of chronic renal failure should require pre-dialysis epoetin therapy. Topics: Anemia; Creatinine; Cross-Sectional Studies; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; France; Hemoglobins; Humans; Incidence; Kidney Diseases; Male; Middle Aged; Prospective Studies; Recombinant Proteins; Regression Analysis; Renal Replacement Therapy; Sex Characteristics; Uremia; White People | 2002 |
IV. NKF-K/DOQI Clinical Practice Guidelines for Anemia of Chronic Kidney Disease: update 2000.
Topics: Anemia; Combined Modality Therapy; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Kidney Failure, Chronic; Male; Peritoneal Dialysis; Recombinant Proteins; Renal Dialysis | 2001 |
UNILATERAL RENAL HYPOXIA AND PRODUCTION OF ERYTHROPOIETIN.
Topics: Animals; Dogs; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Hypoxia; Iron Isotopes; Ischemia; Kidney; Kidney Diseases; Physiology; Research | 1965 |
EFFECTS OF RENAL HYPOXIA ON ERYTHROPOIETIN PRODUCTION.
Topics: Animals; Blood Urea Nitrogen; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Hypoxia; Iron Isotopes; Kidney Diseases; Mice; Pathology; Polycythemia; Rabbits; Radiometry; Renal Artery Obstruction; Research; Reticulocytes; Urea | 1965 |
ERYTHROPOIESIS AND RENAL HOMOTRANSPLANTATION.
Following the successful replacement of diseased kidneys by renal homotransplants, regression of the anemia of chronic renal disease was found in five patients. Increased erythropoietic-stimulating activity was demonstrated in the serum of one patient seven weeks after renal transplantation when he suffered a severe hemorrhage. It is postulated that a renal homotransplant can produce enough erythropoietin to maintain a normal hemoglobin value and to respond to the stimulus of a sudden hemorrhage. Topics: Anemia; Epoetin Alfa; Erythrocyte Count; Erythropoiesis; Erythropoietin; Hemoglobins; Hemorrhage; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Kidney Failure, Chronic; Kidney Transplantation; Male; Postoperative Complications; Reticulocytes; Transplantation, Homologous | 1965 |
EXPERIMENTAL RENAL ERYTHROCYTOSIS. I. EFFECTS OF PRESSURE AND VASCULAR INTERFERENCE.
Topics: Animals; Blood Volume; Epoetin Alfa; Erythrocyte Count; Erythropoietin; Hemoglobinometry; Hydronephrosis; Kidney Diseases; Physiology; Polycythemia; Rabbits; Renal Artery Obstruction; Renal Veins; Research | 1964 |
ERYTHROPOIETIN IN HUMAN PLASMA IN VARIOUS PATHOLOGICAL DISORDERS.
Topics: Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Gout; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Liver Diseases; Neoplasms; Polycythemia Vera; Thyroid Diseases | 1964 |
[ERTHROPOIETIN].
Topics: Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoiesis; Erythropoietin; Hematologic Diseases; Humans; Kidney Diseases | 1964 |
[Humoral aspects of erythropoiesis].
Topics: Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoiesis; Erythropoietin; Humans; Kidney Diseases | 1963 |
NEPHROGENIC ERYTHROCYTOSIS.
Topics: Biological Assay; Epoetin Alfa; Erythrocytes; Erythropoiesis; Erythropoietin; Humans; Hydronephrosis; Kidney; Kidney Diseases; Kidney Diseases, Cystic; Kidney Neoplasms; Physiology; Polycythemia | 1963 |
[STUDY OF ERYTHROPOETINS IN THE SERUM BY THE BONE MARROW CULTURE METHOD].
Topics: Anemia; Animals; Bone Marrow; Culture Media; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Rabbits; Research; Tissue Culture Techniques | 1963 |
Plasma erythropoietin in polycythaemia secondary to renal disease.
Topics: Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Humans; Hydronephrosis; Kidney Diseases; Plasma; Polycystic Kidney Diseases; Polycythemia | 1960 |