CKD Management

1. General Measures (Lifestyle & Dietary Therapy)

Recommendation

Reason 

Salt restriction <5 g/day NaCl (~2 g Na⁺)

sodium volume overload BP slows CKD progression

Protein intake 0.6–0.8 g/kg/day (non-dialysis CKD)

nitrogenous waste uremic toxin generation hyperfiltration injury

Weight control BMI 20–25

Obesity hyperfiltration + insulin resistance

Exercise ≥150 min/week moderate

Improves CV health + insulin sensitivity

Smoking cessation

Smoking endothelial dysfunction + accelerates CKD


2. Blood Pressure Control 

Aspect

Details

Exam Insight

Target BP

<130/80 mmHg

Most important modifiable factor

First-line drugs

ACE inhibitors / ARBs

Especially if A2/A3 albuminuria

Add-on drugs

CCBs, diuretics

Loop diuretics in advanced CKD

Monitoring

Creatinine & K⁺ after initiation(Creatinine rise ≤30% acceptable)



3. Glycemic Control 

Aspect

Recommendation

HbA1c target

~7% (individualized)

SGLT2 inhibitors

Dapagliflozin, Empagliflozin

GLP-1 agonists

Liraglutide, Semaglutide

Insulin

Required in advanced CKD


4. RAAS Blockade (Disease-Modifying Therapy)

Drug Class

Mechanism

ACE inhibitors(First-line)

Efferent arteriole dilation intraglomerular pressure

ARBs(Alternative if ACEi intolerance)

RAAS blockade


5. SGLT2 Inhibitors 

Feature

Details

Mechanism

Drugs

Dapagliflozin, Empagliflozin

Na delivery to macula densa afferent constriction

Renal benefit

CKD progression

Hemodynamic + anti-inflammatory effects

CV benefit

heart failure hospitalization

Osmotic diuresis + preload

When to use

eGFR ≥20 (latest guidelines)

Continue even if GFR falls


6. Management of Complications 

A. Anemia of CKD

Parameter

Reason / Mechanism

Target Hb 10–11.5 g/dL(CHOIR trial

TREAT trial)

Avoid overcorrection thrombosis risk

IV iron preferred (ferritin <100–300, TSAT <20%)

CKD functional iron deficiency

ESA therapy- Epoetin alfa, darbepoetin

Replace Erythropoietin

Caution Avoid Hb >11.5–12

stroke, CV events

 DOSING 

1. Epoetin Alfa

  • Route: SC (preferred) / IV
  • Initial dose:
    • 50–100 IU/kg 3 times/week
  • Adjustment:
    • Increase by 25% if Hb rise <1 g/dL in 4 weeks
    • Reduce if Hb rises too fast (>1 g/dL in 2 weeks)

2. Darbepoetin Alfa

  • Route: SC / IV
  • Initial dose:
    • 0.45 mcg/kg once weekly
      OR
    • 0.75 mcg/kg every 2 weeks
  • Long-acting better compliance

 ESA CONVERSION 

  • 200 IU epoetin ≈ 1 mcg darbepoetin


PRE-ESA WORKUP (MANDATORY BEFORE START)

MUST CORRECT:

  • Iron deficiency:
    • Ferritin ≥100 ng/mL (ND-CKD)
    • Ferritin ≥200 ng/mL (dialysis)
    • TSAT ≥20%
  • Vitamin B12 & folate
  • Ongoing blood loss
  • Infection/inflammation

 IRON + ESA = CORE CONCEPT

 ESA therapy fails without iron

  • Functional iron deficiency:
    • Adequate stores but poor utilization
  • IV iron often required in CKD

 ESA HYPORESPONSIVENESS

Causes (VERY IMPORTANT)

  • Iron deficiency (most common)
  • Inflammation ( hepcidin)
  • Infection
  • Malnutrition
  • Hyperparathyroidism
  • Aluminum toxicity
  • ACE inhibitors / ARBs (mild effect)


 ADVERSE EFFECTS 

1. Hypertension (MOST COMMON)

  • Due to:
    • blood viscosity
    • Vasoconstriction

2. Thromboembolism

  • DVT
  • Stroke
  • Dialysis access thrombosis

3. Pure Red Cell Aplasia (PRCA)

  • Rare but serious
  • Due to anti-EPO antibodies

4. Others

  • Seizures (rare, early therapy)
  • Flu-like symptoms

 CONTRAINDICATIONS

  • Uncontrolled hypertension
  • Active malignancy (relative, case-dependent)
  • History of PRCA

 MONITORING 

  • Hb:
    • Every 2–4 weeks initially
  • Iron status:
    • Ferritin, TSAT
  • BP monitoring
  • Dose titration based on Hb response


B. Hyperkalemia

Management Step

Details

Mechanism

Dietary restriction

K⁺ intake

Prevents accumulation

Loop diuretics

Furosemide

renal K⁺ excretion

Potassium binders

Patiromer, sodium zirconium

GI K⁺ removal


 1. SODIUM POLYSTYRENE SULFONATE (SPS)

  • Cation exchanged: Na⁺ for K⁺
  • Site: Colon


 Mechanism

  • Resin binds K⁺ in colon excreted in stool
  • Releases Na⁺ systemic absorption

 Dose

  • 15–60 g orally or rectally
  • Repeat every 4–6 hrs

 Onset Slow (2–6 hours) NOT for emergencies

 Adverse Effects 

  • Intestinal necrosis (life-threatening)
    • Especially with sorbitol
  • Constipation / diarrhea
  • Sodium overload edema, HTN
  • Hypokalemia

 Guidelines (KDIGO, nephrology societies): avoid routine use

 2. PATIROMER

  • Exchanges: Ca²⁺ for K⁺
  • Site: Colon

 Mechanism

  • Binds K⁺ releases Ca²⁺
  • Works mainly in distal colon

 Dose

  • Start: 8.4 g once daily
  • Max: 25.2 g/day

 Onset

  • ~7 hours (slow)
  • Not for emergency hyperkalemia

 Adverse Effects

  • Hypomagnesemia (IMPORTANT EXAM POINT)
  • Constipation
  • Mild GI symptoms

 Drug Interaction

  • Binds other drugs give 3 hours apart

 Role

  • Chronic hyperkalemia
  • CKD patients on:
    • ACE inhibitors
    • ARBs
    • MRAs

 Allows continuation of RAAS inhibitors (very important concept)


 3. SODIUM ZIRCONIUM CYCLOSILICATE (SZC)

  • Exchanges: Na⁺ + H⁺ for K⁺
  • Site: Entire GI tract


 Mechanism

  • Selectively traps K⁺ (high specificity)
  • Works throughout GI tract

 Dose

  • Initial: 10 g TDS for 48 hours (acute correction)
  • Maintenance: 5–15 g OD

 Onset

  • Fastest binder (~1 hour)
     Can be used in subacute/early hyperkalemia

 Adverse Effects

  • Edema (Na⁺ load)
  • Mild GI symptoms

 Role

  • Acute + chronic hyperkalemia
  • Better than SPS


C. Metabolic Acidosis

Aspect

Details

Threshold

HCO₃⁻ <22 mEq/L

Treatment

Oral sodium bicarbonate

Benefit

Slows CKD progression

 Why is acidosis harmful?

  • Bone buffering osteodystrophy
  • Muscle breakdown sarcopenia
  • progression of CKD
  • mortality

Hence correction is disease-modifying, not just symptomatic

 DOSING 

Initial dose:0.5–1 mEq/kg/day in divided doses

Practical regimen:

  • 500–650 mg tablet = ~6–8 mEq HCO₃⁻
  • Typical:
    • 500 mg TDS mild acidosis
    • Titrate based on HCO₃⁻ levels

 HCO₃⁻ deficit=0.5×body weight×(24−current HCO₃⁻)

 Give gradually (oral), not full correction immediately


 Strong evidence: CKD patients on bicarbonate have slower GFR decline


D. CKD–Mineral Bone Disorder (CKD-MBD)

Component

Treatment

Hyperphosphatemia

Dietary restriction + phosphate binders

Phosphate binders

Calcium carbonate, sevelamer

Vitamin D analogues

Calcitriol

Calcimimetics

Cinacalcet-Activates calcium-sensing receptor (CaSR) on parathyroid gland

“Tricks” gland into sensing high calcium
→ ↓ PTH secretion



 Dietary Phosphate Restriction 

 Target Intake

  • 800–1000 mg/day (KDIGO recommendation)

 Foods to Restrict 

1. High-phosphate natural foods

  • Dairy:
    • Milk, cheese, paneer, yogurt
  • Protein sources:
    • Red meat, organ meat, egg yolk
  • Nuts & seeds:
    • Almonds, peanuts, sunflower seeds
  • Legumes:
    • Beans, lentils

2. MOST IMPORTANT: Hidden phosphate 

  • Processed foods:
    • Packaged meats, sausages
    • Instant foods
  • Cola beverages (phosphoric acid)
  • Bakery products (phosphate additives)


 PHOSPHATE BINDERS 

 WHY PHOSPHATE BINDERS?

 WHEN TO START? (KDIGO GUIDELINES)

  • Start when:
    • Persistent hyperphosphatemia
    • Usually CKD G4–G5 (sometimes earlier)

Targets:

  • Target goal is serum phosphorus ≤5.5 mg/dL
  • Avoid:
    • Hypercalcemia
    • Positive calcium balance


CLASSIFICATION OF PHOSPHATE BINDERS

 CALCIUM-BASED BINDERS

Drugs:

  • Calcium carbonate
  • Calcium acetate

Mechanism:

  • Bind dietary phosphate in gut form insoluble calcium phosphate
  • Excreted in feces

Dose:

  • Calcium carbonate: 500–1500 mg TDS with meals
  • Calcium acetate: more potent (less elemental Ca load)

Disadvantages 

 Hypercalcemia
 Vascular calcification
 Adynamic bone disease

Contraindications:

  • Hypercalcemia
  • Low PTH (adynamic bone disease)
  • Extensive vascular calcification


Restrict total elemental calcium intake <1500 mg/day


 NON-CALCIUM BASED BINDERS

 A. Sevelamer

Types:

  • Sevelamer hydrochloride
  • Sevelamer carbonate


Mechanism:

  • Non-absorbed polymer
  • Binds phosphate via anion exchange


Dose:800–1600 mg TDS with meals(Dietary phosphate enters gut only after meal),Titrate dose; increase by 400-800 mg per meal at 2-week intervals as necessary to achieve target serum phosphorus levels

Additional benefits:

LDL cholesterol
No hypercalcemia
vascular calcification progression

Side effects:

  • GI: bloating, constipation
  • Metabolic acidosis (HCl form)


Indications:

 Preferred in:

  • Hypercalcemia
  • Vascular calcification
  • Adynamic bone disease


 B. Lanthanum carbonate

Mechanism:

  • Binds phosphate insoluble lanthanum phosphate


Dose:500–1000 mg TDS (chewable)

Side effects:

  • GI upset
  • Tissue deposition (long-term safety debated)



 C.  Iron-based binders

  • Ferric citrate
  • Sucroferric oxyhydroxide

Mechanism:

  • Iron binds phosphate insoluble complex

Advantages:

phosphate
Treats anemia (iron absorption)
Low pill burden (especially sucroferric)


Side effects:

  • Dark stools
  • Iron overload (rare)
  • GI upset

 D. Aluminum-based binders (OBSOLETE)

Drug:

  • Aluminum hydroxide

Why avoided?

 Aluminum toxicity:

  • Encephalopathy
  • Osteomalacia
  • Microcytic anemia

 Use only short-term in severe hyperphosphatemia


CALCITRIOL (1,25-DIHYDROXY VITAMIN D₃)

 BASIC CONCEPT

  • Calcitriol = Active form of Vitamin D
  • Chemical name: 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol
  • Final activation step occurs in kidney via:
    • 1-alpha hydroxylase

 In CKD:

  • kidney function enzyme activity calcitriol
    core driver of secondary hyperparathyroidism


 PHYSIOLOGY & SYNTHESIS

Stepwise pathway:

  1. Skin: 7-dehydrocholesterol Vitamin D₃ (UV light)
  2. Liver: 25-OH vitamin D (calcidiol)
  3. Kidney: Calcitriol


Stimulators:

  • Calcium
  • Phosphate
  • PTH

Inhibitors:

  • Phosphate
  • FGF-23


INDICATIONS 

1. CKD–MBD (MOST IMPORTANT)

  • Secondary hyperparathyroidism
  • CKD stage 3–5 (selective use)
  • Dialysis patients (IV preferred)


KDIGO UPDATE 

  • Not routinely used in early CKD (G3–G4)
  • Reserved for:
    • Severe progressive hyperparathyroidism

 Overuse vascular calcification risk

DOSING

Oral:

  • 0.25–1 mcg/day

Dialysis (IV):

  • 0.5–2 mcg 3 times/week

 Adjust based on:

  • PTH
  • Calcium
  • Phosphate


ADVERSE EFFECTS 

1. Hypercalcemia (MOST IMPORTANT)

  • Weakness
  • Confusion
  • Arrhythmias

2. Hyperphosphatemia

  • Due to gut absorption

3. Vascular & Soft Tissue Calcification

  • Coronary artery calcification
  • Valvular calcification

4. Adynamic Bone Disease

  • From over-suppression of PTH

 CONTRAINDICATIONS

  • Hypercalcemia
  • Hyperphosphatemia (uncontrolled)
  • Low PTH (adynamic bone disease)

DRUG INTERACTIONS

  • Thiazides hypercalcemia risk
  • Digoxin arrhythmia risk (due to Ca)
  • Phosphate binders modify effect


COMPARISON WITH OTHER VITAMIN D FORMS

Feature

Calcitriol

Cholecalciferol

Active?

Yes

No

Kidney activation needed

No

Yes

Onset

Rapid

Slow

Use in CKD

Preferred

Less useful

 NEWER ANALOGUES 

1. Paricalcitol

2. Doxercalciferol

 Advantages:

  • Less hypercalcemia
  • Less hyperphosphatemia

 Preferred in:

  • CKD with high Ca/phosphate risk