Abstract

Hyperphosphatemia is a risk factor for arterial calcification contributing to the high-cardiovascular mortality in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Ferric citrate hydrate (JTT-751) is being developed as a treatment for hyperphosphatemia with chronic renal failure and has shown a serum phosphorus-lowering effect in CKD patients. In this study, we evaluated the combination effect of JTT-751 with the phosphorus absorption-reducing effect of calcium carbonate and compared phosphorus absorption-reducing efficacy between three phosphate binders including JTT-751. Normal rats were fed a diet containing either 1% calcium carbonate, 1% JTT-751 or 1% JTT-751 with 1% calcium carbonate, for 7 days. Both 1% calcium carbonate and 1% JTT-751 alone reduced urinary phosphorus excretion, and the combined treatment reduced it more than each single-treatment, without clearly influencing calcium or iron-metabolism. Next, normal rats were fed a diet containing either 0.3, 1 and 3% lanthanum carbonate or 2.3% JTT-751, for 7 days. Either 3% lanthanum carbonate or 2.3% JTT-751 reduced urinary phosphorus excretion. Finally, we compared the reduced amount of urinary phosphorus excretion per dose of compound, of which JTT-751 is comparable to that of calcium carbonate and is greater than that of the lanthanum carbonate. In conclusion, JTT-751 showed an additive effect on the phosphorus absorption-reducing effect of calcium carbonate without influencing calcium- and iron-metabolism, and had a phosphorus absorption-reducing efficacy comparable to or greater than other existing phosphate binders.

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