Limitations of pulse oral calcitriol therapy in continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis patients

1995 
Abstract Calcitriol is increasingly used for therapy of secondary hyperparathyroidism in patients with end-stage renal disease. Its therapeutic efficacy, however, often has been limited by the associated increase in intestinal calcium and phosphorus absorption. Previous studies reported that these side effects could be avoided by intermittent administration of calcitriol in high doses, subsequently referred to as pulse therapy. The present study was designed to investigate pulse oral calcitriol therapy in a patient subgroup especially susceptible to the development of hypercalcemia and hyperphosphatemia under standard continuous calcitriol treatment. We examined 15 peritoneal dialysis patients with moderate degrees of hyperparathyroidism (intact parathyroid hormone [iPTH] levels, 150 to 903 pg/mL) ingesting between 1.5 and 6 g of calcium salts as the sole phosphate binders. Treatment consisted of 0.5 μg calcitriol twice weekly. Eight of these patients had been previously converted to low calcium dialysate to tolerate the necessary doses of phosphate-binding calcium salts. During the study period, comprising 8 pretreatment weeks and 8 weeks of therapy, dialysates and doses of calcium salts were not changed, so that only calcitriol influenced the determined parameters. As expected, iPTH levels decreased rapidly in all patients ( P P
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