24 - BMS305 - Pharmacology - Chronic Kidney Diseases - Lect 2 - Spring 2024
24 - BMS305 - Pharmacology - Chronic Kidney Diseases - Lect 2 - Spring 2024
24 - BMS305 - Pharmacology - Chronic Kidney Diseases - Lect 2 - Spring 2024
gu.edu.eg
G A L A L A U N I V E R S I T Y T H E F U T U R E S T A R T S H E R E
Lec 4.
BMS207, BMS305
UroGenital tract diseases
T H E F U T U R E S T A R T S H E R E
4/17/2024
Intended Learning Outcomes
By the end of this LECTURE session, you should be
able to:
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• Hypertension causes damage to the intrarenal vasculature
resulting in thickening and hyalinisation of the walls of
arterioles and small vessels.
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Optimal Blood Pressure Control in CKD
• Calcium channel blockers
• For patients without proteinuria(calcium channel blockers are the
agents of choice).
• They produce vasodilatation principally by reducing Ca2+ influx
into vascular muscle cells
• Also, promotes sodium excretion in hypertension associated
with fluid overload
• Nondihydropyridine calcium channel blockers, verapamil and
diltiazem- decrease protein excretion in patients with and without
diabetes-reduction in proteinuria
• Headache, facial flushing and oedema are common adverse effects
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Optimal Blood Pressure Control in CKD
• β-Blockers
• β-Blockers are commonly used in the treatment of hypertension in
CKD
• β-blockers can reduce cardiac output, also cause peripheral
vasoconstriction and exacerbate peripheral vascular disease
• More cardioselective β-blockers, atenolol or metoprolol are advisable
to use
• Atenolol is excreted renally and consequently should require dosage
adjustment in renal failure.
• Metoprolol is a better choice, since it is cleared by the liver and needs
no dosage adjustment
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• Anaemia is a common consequence affects most of the people with
CKD stages 4 and 5.
• The fall in haemoglobin level is a slow, insidious process
accompanying with decline in renal function.
• The progenitor cells of the kidney produce 90% of the hormone
erythropoietin, which stimulates red blood cell production.
• Reduction in the number of functioning nephrons decreases renal
production of erythropoietin, which is the primary cause of
anemia in patients with CKD
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Anemia of CKD
• The first-line replacement of iron stores with iron
supplements.
• Alone iron supplementation is not sufficient to increase Hgb
levels, erythropoiesis-stimulating agent (ESAs) are necessary
to replace erythropoietin.
• ESAs are synthetic formulations of erythropoietin produced by
recombinant human DNA technology.
• Use of ESAs increases the iron demand for RBC production
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Anemia of CKD - Oral iron therapy
• Iron Supplementation: Oral and parenteral iron therapy
• Oral iron therapy
• Ferrous sulfate
• Ferrous gluconate
• Ferrous fumarate
• Oral iron therapy: the first-line treatment for patients with CKD not
receiving hemodialysis.
• Ferrous salts are most efficiently absorbed.
• Common adverse effects of oral iron therapy :
• Nausea, epigastric discomfort, abdominal cramps, constipation, and
diarrhea.
• Oral iron therapy develops black stools
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Anemia of CKD - Parenteral iron therapy
• Parenteral iron therapy
• To increase iron stores or for patients receiving hemodialysis, IV iron should be
administered
• Iron dextran
• Is a stable complex of ferric oxyhydroxide and dextran polymers
• Indication: Patients with iron deficiency in whom oral iron is unsatisfactory
• Warnings- risk of anaphylactic reactions -a small test dose of iron dextran
should always be given before full intramuscular or intravenous doses
• Adverse effects: headache, light-headedness, fever, arthralgias, nausea and
vomiting, back pain, flushing, urticaria, bronchospasm, and, rarely,
anaphylaxis and death
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Anemia of CKD - Parenteral iron therapy
• Sodium ferric gluconate, iron sucrose, and ferric carboxymaltose are
associated with fewer severe reactions and a much lower risk of
anaphylaxis and do not require a test dose, making them the preferred
agents in CKD
• Ferumoxytol
• Is a superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticle coated with
carbohydrate.
• The carbohydrate shell is removed in the reticuloendothelial system,
allowing the iron to be stored as ferritin, or released to transferrin
• Indication: Adults with iron deficiency anemia associated with CKD
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• ESAs may be considered if Hgb levels remain persistently low to
improve symptoms of anemia
• ESAs are recommend when Hgb is less than 10 g/dL مهم جدا
• ESAs - Epoetin alfa, Epoetin beta, Darbepoetin alfa and
Methoxy PEG-epoetin beta
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Anemia of CKD - Erythropoiesis-Stimulating Agents
• Epoetin α and epoetin β have the same biological activities as
endogenous erythropoiesis
• Darbepoetin alfa has two additional carbohydrate side chains
that increase the half-life compared with epoetin α and
endogenous erythropoiesis
• Methoxy PEG-epoetin beta has the addition of an amide bond
that produces a longer half-life than the other
• Most common adverse effects:
• increase blood pressure, seizures and pure red cell aplasia
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• ++++ parathyroid hormone (PTH) occur early as
kidney function begins to decline.
• The actions of PTH on bone turnover lead to CKD-
mineral and bone disorders (CKD-MBD).
• The parathyroid glands release PTH in response to
decreased serum calcium and increased serum
phosphorus levels.
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Phosphate-Binding Agents Used to Treat
Hyperphosphatemia in CKD
• Phosphate- binding agents are used to bind dietary phosphate in the
GI tract to form an insoluble complex that is excreted in the feces.
• Phosphorus absorption is decreased decreasing serum phosphorus
levels
• Resin-based binders - Sevelamer carbonate
• Elemental-based binders- Lanthanum
• Iron-based binders- Sucroferric oxyhydroxide and Ferric citrate
• Calcium-containing binders- Calcium carbonate and Calcium acetate
• Aluminum-based binders- Aluminum hydroxide
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Phosphate-Binding Agents Used to Treat
Hyperphosphatemia in CKD
• Sevelamer has an added benefit of reducing LDL-C by
up to 30% and increasing HDL-C levels.
• Sevelamer carbonate may have benefit to aid in the
correction of metabolic acidosis, another complication
of kidney failure.
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Phosphate binders
• Sucroferric oxyhydroxide is a non-calcium, iron-based phosphate binder
• It controls serum phosphorus levels in adults with chronic kidney disease on
haemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis.
• It is used in form of chewable tablets.
• MOA-
• It preserves the phosphate adsorption capacity.
• Dietary phosphate binds strongly to sucroferric oxyhydroxide in the
gastrointestinal tract.
• The bound phosphate is eliminated in the feces and thereby prevented from
absorption into the blood.
• As a consequence of the decreased dietary phosphate absorption, serum
phosphorus concentrations are reduced.
• Diarrhea and discolored feces are common GIT-related adverse effects
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Phosphate-Binding Agents Used to Treat
Hyperphosphatemia in CKD
• Calcium carbonate can also aid in the correction of
metabolic acidosis
• The use of calcium-containing binders in CKD affects
calcium balance, so restricting the dose in all stages of
CKD
• Aluminum-containing phosphate-binding agents
are not recommended for chronic use in patients with
CKD to avoid aluminum accumulation, leading to
encephalopathy, bone disease, and anemia.
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Treatments for Secondary
Hyperparathyroidism -Vitamin D Therapy
• Vitamin D regulates : Calcium and phosphorus absorption from
the GI tract and kidney, PTH secretion, maintaining muscle,
cardiovascular, immune and brain function, and glucose control.
• In CKD, a decrease in renal metabolism of vitamin D - decreases
circulating concentrations of the activated form of vitamin D,
calcitriol (1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D) and its precursor 25-
hydroxyvitamin D
• Vitamin D deficiency begins early in CKD and increases as
kidney function declines
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Vitamin D (prohormone):
• Vitamin D2 –Ergocalciferol
• Cholecalciferol, vitamin D3
• Active vitamin D: Calcitriol, active Vit D
• Vitamin D analogs: Paricalcitol and Doxercalciferol
• MOA-
➢facilitate intestinal absorption of calcium,
➢stimulates the absorption of phosphate and magnesium ions.
➢In the absence of vitamin D, dietary calcium is not absorbed at all
efficiently.
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Vitamin D
• Ergocalciferol
• Is natural highly lipid soluble
• several weeks are required to saturate body stores and achieve a
maximal effect.
• a long half-life.
• Prolonged periods of hypercalcemia occur after overdose with
ergocalciferol.
• Dihydrotachysterol (DHT)
• Is a synthetic vitamin D analogue
• with an onset of maximal effect and biological half-life between those of
ergocalciferol and calcitriol.
• Toxicity resulting from hypercalcemia still can be prolonged (up to 30
days).
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Vitamin D
• Calcitriol
▪ Is the vitamin D metabolite of choice to provide calcemic
actions because it has the most rapid onset of maximal
action and the shortest biologic half-life.
▪ Calcitriol is approximately 1000 times as effective as
parent vitamin D.
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Treatments for Secondary
Hyperparathyroidism -Vitamin D Therapy
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Treatments for Secondary
Hyperparathyroidism -Vitamin D Therapy
• Ergocalciferol, cholecalciferol, and calcifediol
• Effective in lowering PTH secretion in patients with
CKD G3
• Useful in later stages of CKD to maintain adequate 25-
hydroxyvitamin D levels for extrarenal functions
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• Old female patient with anemia secondary to chronic kidney disease and a hemoglobin level of 8.6 g/dl can treated with which of
the following drug?
a) Oral folic acid
b) Oral iron
c) Parantral iron
d) Epoetin alfa
• In CKD G4 and G5, which Vitamin D preparation we used to decrease PTH secretion in severe hyperparathyroidism?
a) Calcitriol
b) Ergocalciferol
c) Cholicalciferol
d) calcitonine
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