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Browsing by Author "Trevino, Laurie"
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Item EOS789, a broad-spectrum inhibitor of phosphate transport, is safe with an indication of efficacy in a phase 1b randomized crossover trial in hemodialysis patients(Elsevier, 2020) Hill Gallant, Kathleen M.; Stremke, Elizabeth R.; Trevino, Laurie; Moorthi, Ranjani N.; Doshi, Simit; Wastney, Meryl E.; Hisada, Nozomi; Sato, Jotaro; Ogita, Yoshitaka; Fujii, Naohisa; Matsuda, Yuya; Kake, Takei; Moe, Sharon M.; Medicine, School of MedicineThe treatment of hyperphosphatemia remains challenging in patients receiving hemodialysis. This phase 1b study assessed safety and efficacy of EOS789, a novel pan-inhibitor of phosphate transport (NaPi-2b, PiT-1, PiT-2) on intestinal phosphate absorption in patients receiving intermittent hemodialysis therapy. Two cross-over, randomized order studies of identical design (ten patients each) compared daily EOS789 50 mg to placebo with meals and daily EOS789 100 mg vs EOS789 100 mg plus 1600 mg sevelamer with meals. Patients ate a controlled diet of 900 mg phosphate daily for two weeks and began EOS789 on day four. On day ten, a phosphate absorption testing protocol was performed during the intradialytic period. Intestinal fractional phosphate absorption was determined by kinetic modeling of serum data following oral and intravenous doses of 33Phosphate ( 33P). The results demonstrated no study drug related serious adverse events. Fractional phosphate absorption was 0.53 (95% confidence interval: 0.39,0.67) for placebo vs. 0.49 (0.35,0.63) for 50 mg EOS789; and 0.40 (0.29,0.50) for 100 mg EOS789 vs. 0.36 (0.26,0.47) for 100 mg EOS789 plus 1600 mg sevelamer (all not significantly different). The fractional phosphate absorption trended lower in six patients who completed both studies with EOS789 100 mg compared with placebo. Thus, in this phase 1b study, EOS789 was safe and well tolerated. Importantly, the use of 33P as a sensitive and direct measure of intestinal phosphate absorption allows specific testing of drug efficacy. The effectiveness of EOS789 needs to be evaluated in future phase 2 and phase 3 studies.Item Post-Dialysis Serum Phosphate Equilibrium in Hemodialysis Patients on a Controlled Diet and No Binders(Wiley, 2022) Stremke, Elizabeth R.; Trevino, Laurie; Doshi, Simit; Moorthi, Ranjani N.; Hill Gallant, Kathleen M.; Moe, Sharon M.; Medicine, School of MedicineBackground: Studies evaluating the change in serum phosphate post hemodialysis (HD) demonstrate an initial decline during dialysis but a rebound post dialysis. However, previous studies were done on usual diet and phosphate binders, with limited number of blood draws, confounding conclusions. We determined serum phosphate reduction, rebound, and equilibrium over 48 h in HD patients consuming a controlled, low phosphorus diet without binders. Methods: Serum phosphate (mg/dL) was analyzed before and after a HD treatment and frequently during the ensuing 48 h intradialytic period in the clinical research unit. Thirteen subjects were enrolled and had been off phosphate binders for 10 days and consumed a standardized low phosphate (900 mg/day) diet for 3 weeks prior to the assessments. Linear regression was used to determine relationships between the pre-HD serum phosphate, decline post-HD (post-HD drop); and a 48 h area under curve (AUC) using the trapezoidal method as a measure of overall phosphate levels from the end of dialysis to 48 h post dialysis. Repeated Measures ANOVA with Dunnett's posthoc test was used to determine rebound. Results: Five of 13 subjects returned to >90% of their pre-HD serum phosphate within the first 24 h post-HD, and serum phosphate was 94 ± 0.11% (range 63%-113%) by 48 h after the completion of HD. The 48 h AUC of serum phosphate during the interdialytic period was correlated with both pre dialysis phosphorus (r = 0.85; p = 0.0002) and the pre-post drop in serum phosphate during dialysis (r = 0.69; p = 0.0085). In contrast, the net ultrafiltration was not related to the 48 h AUC of serum phosphorus (r = 0.20; p = 0.51). Conclusions: In hemodialysis patients on standard low phosphorus diet and no phosphate binders, the interdialytic serum phosphorus level, assessed as AUC, is determined by the pre dialysis phosphorus and net-change in serum phosphorus during the dialysis treatment, but not the ultrafiltration volume [Correction added on 25 January, after first online publication: In the last sentence of the Abstract, the word "potassium" has been replaced with "phosphorus" to improve accuracy.].