Paricalcitol Versus Calcifediol for Treating Hyperparathyroidism in Kidney Transplant Recipients.
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2017-09-28
Authors
Cruzado, Josep M
Lauzurica, Ricardo
Pascual, Julio
Marcen, Roberto
Moreso, Francesc
Gutierrez-Dalmau, Alex
Andrés, Amado
Hernández, Domingo
Torres, Armando
Beneyto, Maria Isabel
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Abstract
Secondary hyperparathyroidism (SHPT) and vitamin D deficiency are common at kidney transplantation and are associated with some early and late complications. This study was designed to evaluate whether paricalcitol was more effective than nutritional vitamin D for controlling SHPT in de novo kidney allograft recipients. This was a 6-month, investigator-initiated, multicenter, open-label, randomized clinical trial. Patients with pretransplantation iPTH between 250 and 600 pg/ml and calcium 110 pg/ml at 6 months. Secondary endpoints were bone mineral metabolism, renal function, and allograft protocol biopsies. The primary outcome occurred in 19.6% of patients in the PAR group and 36.2% of patients in the CAL group (P = 0.07). However, there was a higher percentage of patients with iPTH Both PAR and CAL reduced iPTH, but PAR was associated with a higher proportion of patients with iPTH
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hyperparathyroidism, kidney transplantation, paricalcitol, vitamin D