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Effects of Patiromer on Pharmacokinetics of Immunosuppresive Drugs in Renal Transplant Recipients (TACPAT)

University of Oslo (UIO) logo

University of Oslo (UIO)

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 4

Conditions

Hyperkalemia
Kidney Transplant

Treatments

Drug: Patiromer Oral Product

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Patiromer lowers potassium effectively in patients with hyperkalemia and chronic kidney disease. Patients with a kidney transplant usually have reduced renal function and may also develop hyperkalemia. However, potential interactions between immunosuppressive medications and patiromer have not been evaluated. These interactions could involve change in AUC of immunosuppressive drugs, such as calcineurin inhibitors or mycophenolate, or increased risk of hypomagnesemia, since both tacrolimus and patiromer have this potential side effect. We wish to evaluate potential interactions to ensure safe use of this drug in the transplant population.

Full description

Patients with a kidney transplant may develop hyperkalemia. This could be due to different mechanisms. In some patients it could be due to reduced kidney function. In others, it could be secondary to renal tubular acidosis type 4 caused by necessary medications used after transplantation.

The most important medicines contributing to hyperkalemia after kidney transplantation are calcineurin inhibitors which are a compulsory part of the immunosuppressive regimen, ACE inhibitors or ARBs in patients with hypertension, and trimethoprim-sulfa, which is used as infection prophylaxis in all patients during the first 6 months after transplantation. In the weeks after renal transplantation around 5-10% of transplant patients at our institution at some point develop hyperkalemia above the limit where some type of management of hyperkalemia would be indicated. As the drugs mentioned above can rarely or not at all be withdrawn after transplantation, most doctors will either observe the hyperkalemia untreated or try to lower the potassium level.

In outpatients with s-potassium of 5 - 6.5, urgent management is usually not necessary. However, some kind of intervention is still indicated, to make sure that the potassium will decrease during the next days. Patiromer could be an interesting alternative in those kidney transplanted patients that are in this category. We are not aware of any published studies describing the use of patiromer in the transplant population. We intend to investigate if there is any pharmacokinetic interaction between patiromer and immunosuppressive drugs affecting the blood concentration of the latter.

Enrollment

13 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Renal transplant recipients, at least 3 weeks after transplantation, who receive Tacrolimus as part of their immunosuppressive therapy, with stabile tacrolimus dose and trough tacrolimus concentration.
  2. Recipients 18 years of age or older.
  3. Hyperkalemia (K>5 and <6,0)
  4. Signed informed consent.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Concomitant treatment with: diltiazem, verapamil, fenytoin, carbamazapin, fluconazole, ketoconazole, vorikonazole, erythromycin, clarithromycin, resonium-calcium, and/or sodium zirconium cyclosilicate.
  2. Constipation, defined as fewer than three bowel movements per week.
  3. Hypomagnesemia less than 0.6 mmol/L.
  4. Serum potassium level of greater than 6.0 mEq/L.
  5. Increased immunologic risk patient (DSA, ABO-incompatible transplant).
  6. Pregnancy or suspected pregnancy (pregnancy is excluded at time of transplantation by measuring HCG, kidney transplanted patients should not become pregnant before at least one year after transplant, and no transplanted patient has ever become pregnant during the first weeks after transplantation. They are all informed regarding different types of contraception). Fertile women will be tested for pregnancy before inclusion.
  7. Hypersensitivity/allergy to patiromer.
  8. Other serious medical or psychiatric condition likely to interfere with participation.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

13 participants in 1 patient group

All patients use both patiromer and tacrolimus
Experimental group
Description:
Pharmacokinetic investigation of tacrolimus performed in both the presence and absence of patiromer for all patients.
Treatment:
Drug: Patiromer Oral Product

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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