Crossover comparison of intravenous and subcutaneous erythropoietin in haemodialysis patients. |
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Authors: | C R Tomson J Feehally J Walls |
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Affiliation: | Department of Nephrology, Leicester General Hospital, UK. |
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Abstract: | To examine the suggestion that s.c. administration of recombinant human erythropoietin (rHuEpo) may be more effective than i.v. administration, we changed the route of administration in 11 patients, previously established on a stable dose of rHuEpo given twice or thrice weekly, from i.v. to s.c. administration without altering the dose. All patients were iron replete (serum ferritin greater than 100 micrograms/l). In one patient the haemoglobin concentration declined at the time of conversion due to poor compliance, and another patient died shortly after conversion. In the remainder there was a significant increase in haemoglobin concentration from 9.30 (SD 0.78) at the time of conversion to 9.84 (0.59) at 1 month, 10.35 (1.22) at 2 months, and 10.39 (1.42) at 3 months. The increase in haemoglobin concentration was greater than 1 g/dl at 3 months in only five of the patients. Serum ferritin prior to conversion was similar in 'responders' and 'non-responders', but all responders had a transferrin saturation of greater than 16%, whereas three of four non-responders had transferrin saturation of less than or equal to 16%. Subcutaneous administration of rHuEpo is more effective, dose for dose, than i.v. administration, but poor iron mobilization may limit the response. |
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Keywords: | erythropoietin iron deficiency anaemia haemodialysis |
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