Abstract
Little was known about how chronic hyperkalemia (cHK) in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) is managed in British Columbia, Canada. To investigate the trend in sodium polystyrene sulfonate (SPS) and calcium polystyrene sulfonate (CPS) utilization and their efficacy in treating cHK in CKD patients from British Columbia, Canada. Retrospective cohort. CKD patients aged ≥18 years, followed in Kidney Care Clinic (KCC), who had at least 2 potassium values ≥5.0 mmol/L separated by no more than 91 days during the period of June 1, 2015, to July 31, 2021, were included. Index date was the first date of the 2 potassium values ≥5.0 mmol/L. Patients who received SPS or CPS within 90 days before index date were excluded. Patients who were on dialysis or received kidney transplantation on or before index date were also excluded. Continuous exposure to SPS and CPS. SPS/CPS prescription utilization trend was described by the proportion of patients ever treated with SPS/CPS, median time in days between cHK diagnosis and initiating treatment with SPS/CPS, total and median number of SPS/CPS prescriptions dispensed. Change in mean serum potassium concentration before and after a 90-day continuous treatment with SPS/CPS was estimated. Descriptive. This study included 10 495 patients with cHK (median age 74 years, 60% were male). Median follow-up time was 625 days. Only 2864 (27%) patients were dispensed at least 1 prescription of either SPS or CPS. A total 7300 prescriptions were dispensed; median prescriptions dispensed per patients were 2 (interquartile range [IQR]: 1-3). Median time from index date to the first prescription dispensing date was 154 days (IQR: 36-455). Continuous 90-day treatment with SPS/CPS decreased the mean serum potassium concentration by 0.60 mmol/L, from 5.58 to 4.98 mmol/L. Descriptive observational study without control group. In British Columbia, only 1 in 4 CKD patients with cHK were dispensed with SPS/CPS, mostly with higher degrees of hyperkalemia. These medications appeared to be moderately effective in reducing the serum potassium concentration. Future research is necessary to evaluate the comparative effectiveness of newer generation medications.
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