Use of phosphate-binding agents is associated with a lower risk of mortality

Jorge B. Cannata-Andia*, Jose L. Fernandez-Martin, Francesco Locatelli, Gerard London, Jose L. Gorriz, Juergen Floege, Markus Ketteler, Anibal Ferreira, Adrian Covic, Boleslaw Rutkowski, Dimitrios Memmos, Willem-Jan Bos, Vladimir Teplan, Judit Nagy, Christian Tielemans, Dierik Verbeelen, David Goldsmith, Reinhard Kramar, Pierre-Yves Martin, Rudolf P. WuethrichDrasko Pavlovic, Miha Benedik, Jose Emilio Sanchez, Pablo Martinez-Camblor, Manuel Naves-Diaz, Juan J. Carrero, Carmine Zoccali

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    132 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Hyperphosphatemia has been associated with higher mortality risk in CKD 5 patients receiving dialysis. Here, we determined the association between the use of single and combined phosphate-binding agents and survival in 6797 patients of the COSMOS study: a 3-year follow-up, multicenter, open-cohort, observational prospective study carried out in 227 dialysis centers from 20 European countries. Patient phosphate-binding agent prescriptions (time-varying) and the case-mix-adjusted facility percentage of phosphate-binding agent prescriptions (instrumental variable) were used as predictors of the relative all-cause and cardiovascular mortality using Cox proportional hazard regression models. Three different multivariate models that included up to 24 variables were used for adjustments. After multivariate analysis, patients prescribed phosphate-binding agents showed a 29 and 22% lower all-cause and cardiovascular mortality risk, respectively. The survival advantage of phosphate-binding agent prescription remained statistically significant after propensity score matching analysis. A decrease of 8% in the relative risk of mortality was found for every 10% increase in the case-mix-adjusted facility prescription of phosphate-binding agents. All single and combined therapies with phosphate-binding agents, except aluminum salts, showed a beneficial association with survival. The findings made in the present association study need to be confirmed by randomized controlled trials to prove the observed beneficial effect of phosphate-binding agents on mortality.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)998-1008
    Number of pages11
    JournalKidney International
    Volume84
    Issue number5
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Nov 2013

    Keywords

    • dialysis
    • hyperparathyroidism
    • hyperphosphatemia
    • mineral metabolism
    • mortality risk
    • phosphate binders
    • CHRONIC KIDNEY-DISEASE
    • EUROPEAN HEMODIALYSIS POPULATION
    • PRACTICE PATTERNS
    • DIALYSIS PATIENTS
    • SECONDARY HYPERPARATHYROIDISM
    • SEVELAMER HYDROCHLORIDE
    • VASCULAR CALCIFICATION
    • RENAL-FAILURE
    • VITAMIN-D
    • CALCIUM

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