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Randomized Clinical Trial of Sodium Polystyrene Sulfonate for the Treatment of Mild Hyperkalemia in CKD
Authors:Laurence Lepage  Anne-Claude Dufour  Jessica Doiron  Katia Handfield  Katherine Desforges  Robert Bell  Michel Vallée  Michel Savoie  Sylvie Perreault  Louis-Philippe Laurin  Vincent Pichette  Jean-Philippe Lafrance
Affiliation:*Department of Pharmacy and;Division of Nephrology, Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital, Montreal, Canada;;Department of Medicine.;§Faculty of Pharmacy, and ;Department of Pharmacology, University of Montreal, Montreal, Canada; and;Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital Research Center, Montreal, Canada
Abstract:

Background and objectives

Hyperkalemia affects up to 10% of patients with CKD. Sodium polystyrene sulfonate has long been prescribed for this condition, although evidence is lacking on its efficacy for the treatment of mild hyperkalemia over several days. This study aimed to evaluate the efficacy of sodium polystyrene sulfonate in the treatment of mild hyperkalemia.

Design, setting, participants, & measurements

In total, 33 outpatients with CKD and mild hyperkalemia (5.0–5.9 mEq/L) in a single teaching hospital were included in this double–blind randomized clinical trial. We randomly assigned these patients to receive either placebo or sodium polystyrene sulfonate of 30 g orally one time per day for 7 days. The primary outcome was the comparison between study groups of the mean difference of serum potassium levels between the day after the last dose of treatment and baseline.

Results

The mean duration of treatment was 6.9 days. Sodium polystyrene sulfonate was superior to placebo in the reduction of serum potassium levels (mean difference between groups, −1.04 mEq/L; 95% confidence interval, −1.37 to −0.71). A higher proportion of patients in the sodium polystyrene sulfonate group attained normokalemia at the end of their treatment compared with those in the placebo group, but the difference did not reach statistical significance (73% versus 38%; P=0.07). There was a trend toward higher rates of electrolytic disturbances and an increase in gastrointestinal side effects in the group receiving sodium polystyrene sulfonate.

Conclusions

Sodium polystyrene sulfonate was superior to placebo in reducing serum potassium over 7 days in patients with mild hyperkalemia and CKD.
Keywords:hyperkalemia   randomized controlled trial   polystyrene sulfonic acid   kidney failure   chronic   double-blind method   humans   outpatients   polystyrenes   potassium   renal insufficiency   chronic
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