Serum phosphate modifies the vascular response to vitamin D receptor activation in chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients
2016
Abstract Background and aims Vitamin D receptor activation (VDRA) ameliorates endothelial dysfunction in CKD patients but also increases phosphate and FGF-23, which may attenuate the beneficial effect of VDRA on endothelial function. Methods and Results This is a pre-specified secondary analysis of the PENNY trial (NCT01680198) testing the effect of phosphate and FGF-23 on the flow mediated vasodilatory (FMD) response to paricalcitol (PCT, 2 μg/day) and placebo over a 12-weeks treatment period. Eighty-eight stage G3-4 CKD patients were randomized to PCT (n = 44) and Placebo (n = 44). Endothelial function was assessed by measuring endothelium dependent forearm blood flow (FBF) response to ischemia. The FMD response was by the 61% higher in PCT treated patients than in those on placebo (P = 0.01). Phosphate (+11%, P = 0.039), calcium (+3%, P = 0.01) and, particularly so, FGF23 (+164%, P Conclusions The beneficial effect of PCT on endothelial function in CKD is maximal in patients with no or minimal changes in phosphate and it is abolished in patients with a pronounced phosphate rise. These findings generate the hypothesis that the endothelium protective effect by VDRA may be potentiated by phosphate lowering interventions.
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