학술논문

Hyperkalemia: A Cause of Non-adherence to Renin- Angiotensin-Aldosterone System Inhibitors in Chronic Kidney Disease: A Retrospective Study
Document Type
article
Source
İstanbul Medical Journal, Vol 24, Iss 4, Pp 404-411 (2023)
Subject
chronic kidney disease
hyperkalemia
renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system inhibitors
Medicine
Language
English
ISSN
2619-9793
2148-094X
Abstract
Introduction: There is increasing awareness of non-adherence to renin-angiotensin- aldosterone system inhibitors (RAASi) in chronic kidney disease (CKD). This study aimed to evaluate the incidence of hyperkalemic adult CKD patients who were prescribed RAASi and to determine variations in pharmacological interventions to uncover reasons for non-adherence to RAASi treatment. Methods: The incidence of hyperkalemia and non-adherence to RAASi [angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (ACEi)/angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARBs)] in CKD patients was examined among 471 patients over the age of 18 years who had estimated-glomerular filtration rate (e-GFR) measurements and were diagnosed with CKD between stages 1 and 5. Hyperkalemia was defined as serum potassium (K+) ≥5 mmol/L. The number of hyperkalemic patients not reaching the target dose, hyperkalemia as a reason for not reaching the target dose, patients receiving sodium polystyrene sulfonate patients discontinuing ACEi/ARBs, having a decreased dose of ACEi/ARBs, or treated with the addition or increasing dose of diuretics were compared between the hyperkalemia groups. Results: Hyperkalemia was detected in 29.1% of the patients (n=137), being mild in 21.7%, moderate in 6.2%, and severe in 1.3%. The main finding was that the frequency of patients not reaching the target dose of ACEi/ARBs treatment due to hyperkalemia, hypotension, or e-GFR increase higher than 30% was dramatically higher among patients having moderate/severe hyperkalemia (p