International variation in the management of mineral bone disorder in patients with chronic kidney disease: Results from CKDopps

2019 
Abstract Background and objectives Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is commonly associated with mineral and bone metabolism disorders, but these are less frequently studied in non-dialysis CKD patients than in dialysis patients. We examined and described international variation in mineral and bone disease (MBD) markers and their treatment and target levels in Stage 3–5 CKD patients. Design, setting, participants, and measurements Prospective cohort study of 7658 adult patients with eGFR Results Over two-thirds of the patients had MBD markers measured at time intervals in line with practice guidelines. P and iPTH increased and Ca decreased gradually from eGFR 60–20 ml/min/1.73m2 and more sharply for eGFR  5.5 mg/dL, phosphate binder use was 14% to 43% across the four countries. Among patients with PTH >300 pg/mL, use of active (calcitriol and related analogs) vitamin D was 12%–51%, and use of any (active or nutritional) vitamin D was 60%–87%. Conclusions Although monitoring of CKD-MBD laboratory markers by nephrologists in CKDopps countries is consistent with guidelines, target levels vary notably and prescription of medications to treat abnormalities in these laboratory markers is generally low in these cross-sectional analyses. While there are opportunities to increase treatment of hyperphosphatemia, hyperparathyroidism, and vitamin D deficiency in advanced CKD, the effect on longer-term complications of these conditions requires study.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    21
    References
    5
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []