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Efficacy of daprodustat on anemia in hemodialysis patients with sustained inflammation: a case report. | LitMetric

Efficacy of daprodustat on anemia in hemodialysis patients with sustained inflammation: a case report.

CEN Case Rep

Department of Nephrology, Daimon Clinic for Internal Medicine, Nephrology and Dialysis, Oshino 1-400, Nonoichi, 921-8802, Japan.

Published: November 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Hypoxia-inducible factor prolyl hydroxylase inhibitors, like daprodustat, have been approved in Japan to treat anemia in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) and those on dialysis.
  • An 89-year-old man on hemodialysis had fluctuating hemoglobin levels while being treated with darbepoetin alfa, leading to a switch to daprodustat, which effectively maintained his hemoglobin despite ongoing inflammation.
  • Daprodustat may be more effective than darbepoetin alfa in treating anemia under inflammatory conditions due to its less variable response and potential to extend red blood cell lifespan.

Article Abstract

Hypoxia-inducible factor prolyl hydroxylase inhibitors improve anemia in CKD and dialysis patients and were approved for anemia treatment with these populations in Japan. An 89 year-old man with anemia and on maintenance hemodialysis was successfully treated with a dose-up of darbepoetin alfa from 10 to 20 μg per week, and the dose was gradually tapered to 5 μg. Later, serum hemoglobin levels decreased with the newly occurring sustained inflammation and left pleural effusion of an unknown cause, and the darbepoetin alfa dose was increased again to 20 μg per week, which was not effective. Darbepoetin alfa was switched to 4 mg of daprodustat daily, which was fairly effective under sustained inflammation, with serum hemoglobin levels maintained at 11-12 g/dL. The increase in hemoglobin levels was ascribed to the increase in the number of red blood cells, not the mean corpuscular hemoglobin level. During the inflammatory state, despite the contrasting effect on anemia by the 20 μg of darbepoetin alfa weekly and 4 mg of daprodustat daily, the reticulocyte counts were equivalent. The serum erythropoietin levels during daprodustat administration were within the physiological range (8.5-18.8 mIU/mL). For anemia treatment in hemodialysis patients, daprodustat is less influenced by the inflammatory status than darbepoetin alfa, and one of the possible reasons for this includes the extended red blood cell lifespan.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9626701PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13730-022-00706-1DOI Listing

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