Litcius/Paper detail

Roxadustat for CKD-related Anemia in Non-dialysis Patients

Daniel W. Coyne, Simon D. Roger, Sug Kyun Shin, Sung Gyun Kim, Andrés Cadena, Moustafa A. Moustafa, Tak Mao Chan, Anatole Besarab, Willis Chou, Charles W. Bradley, Meraf Eyassu, Robert Leong, Tyson T. Lee, Khalil G. Saikali, Lynda A. Szczech, Kin-Hung P. Yu

2020Kidney International Reports114 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

IntroductionRoxadustat is an oral hypoxia-inducible factor prolyl hydroxylase inhibitor that stimulates erythropoiesis and improves iron metabolism. We assessed the efficacy and tolerability of roxadustat in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD)-related anemia not on dialysis.MethodsANDES was a global Phase 3 randomized study in which adults with stage 3–5 CKD not on dialysis received roxadustat or placebo. Patients were initially dosed thrice weekly; dose was titrated to achieve a hemoglobin level ≥11.0 g/dl, followed by titration for maintenance. The primary endpoints were change in hemoglobin (weeks 28–52) and proportion of patients achieving a hemoglobin response (hemoglobin ≥11.0 g/dl and increase ≥1.0 g/dl [baseline >8.0 g/dl], or increase ≥2.0 g/dl [baseline ≤8.0 g/dl]) (week 24). Treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) and serious adverse events (TESAEs) were recorded.ResultsIn roxadustat (n = 616) and placebo (n = 306) groups, hemoglobin mean (SD) change from baseline over weeks 28–52 was significantly larger for roxadustat (2.00 [0.95]) versus placebo (0.16 [0.90]), corresponding to least-squares mean difference of 1.85 g/dl (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.74–1.97; P < 0.0001). The proportion of patients achieving a response at week 24 was larger for roxadustat (86.0%; 95% CI 83.0%–88.7%) versus placebo (6.6%; 95% CI 4.1%–9.9%; P < 0.0001). The proportion of patients receiving rescue therapy at week 52 was smaller for roxadustat (8.9%) versus placebo (28.9%); hazard ratio, 0.19 (95% CI 0.14–0.28; P < .0001). The incidences of TEAEs and TESAEs were comparable.ConclusionThis study showed that roxadustat corrected and maintained hemoglobin and was well tolerated in patients with CKD-related anemia not on dialysis (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01750190).

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePlaceboTolerabilityAnemiaInternal medicineHazard ratioHemoglobinAdverse effectGastroenterologyKidney diseaseClinical endpointDialysisConfidence intervalSurgeryRandomized controlled trialPathologyAlternative medicineErythropoietin and Anemia TreatmentDialysis and Renal Disease ManagementIron Metabolism and Disorders