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Volume 16, Issue 2, Pages 87-99 (April 2006)


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New Therapies for Uremic Secondary Hyperparathyroidism

Pablo Ureña Torres, MDCorresponding Author Informationemail address, Dominique Prié, MD, Laurent Beck, PhD, Gérard Friedlander, MD

Secondary hyperparathyroidism (SHPT) is a common and serious complication of chronic kidney disease (CKD). It affects more than 300,000 end-stage renal disease patients treated by dialysis and probably more than 3 million patients with CKD worldwide. For a long time, traditional therapies for SHPT had consisted of correcting the hypocalcemia using calcium salts and vitamin D derivatives, preventing the hyperphosphatemia by calcium- or aluminum-containing intestinal phosphate binders, and recently by using no metal-containing intestinal phosphate binders; however, these therapies are limited by the occurrence of hypercalcemia, hyperphosphatemia, and the lack of specificity and long-term efficacy. Moreover, surgical parathyroidectomy (PTX), which remains the gold standard therapy, is not exempt from risk. PTX exposes patients to anesthesia risks, presurgical and postsurgical complications, and in many cases a permanent state of hypoparathyroidism. Thus, the medical treatment of SHPT became an ideal target for the development of new therapies and strategies. The purpose of this article is to provide an overview of these new therapies, including vitamin D analogs, intestinal phosphate binders, calcimimetics, parathyroidectomies, tyrosine kinase inhibitors, azydothymidine, anticalcineurins, N-terminal truncated parathyroid hormone fragments, bisphosphonates, calcitonin, osteoprotegerin, and others. The use of these new therapies alone or in combination may help to optimize the future treatment of SHPT in CKD patients.

 Service de Néphrologie et Dialyse, Clinique de I’Orangerie, Aubervilliers, France

 Service de Physiologie-Explorations Fonctionnelles, hôpital Necker, Paris, France

Corresponding Author InformationAddress reprint requests to Pablo Ureña Torres MD, Service de Néphrologie et Dialyse, Clinique de I’Orangerie, 11 boulevard Anatole France, 93300, Aubervilliers, France

PII: S1051-2276(06)00011-2

doi:10.1053/j.jrn.2006.01.011


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