• Am. J. Kidney Dis. · Aug 1995

    Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial

    Intravenous versus subcutaneous dosing of epoetin alfa in hemodialysis patients.

    • E P Paganini, J W Eschbach, J M Lazarus, J C Van Stone, L F Gimenez, S E Graber, J C Egrie, D M Okamoto, and D A Goodkin.
    • Department of Medicine, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, OH, USA.
    • Am. J. Kidney Dis. 1995 Aug 1; 26 (2): 331-40.

    AbstractHemodialysis patients were studied to determine whether the dose of recombinant human erythropoietin (Epoetin alfa; Amgen Inc, Thousand Oaks, CA) required to maintain a therapeutic hematocrit level changed when the route of administration was switched from intravenously (IV) three times per week to subcutaneously (SC) three times per week. Thirteen to 16 weeks after patients were changed from IV three times per week to SC three times per week treatment, the Epoetin alfa requirement was reduced by 18.5% +/- 3.8% (P < 0.001; n = 72), and after 21 to 24 weeks of SC treatment the mean dosage had decreased from the IV dose by 26.5% +/- 4.2% (P < 0.001; n = 41). Sixty-one percent (44 of 72) of patients experienced maintenance-dose reductions over 13 to 16 weeks of treatment and 80% (33 of 41) were maintained on lower weekly doses after 21 to 24 weeks of treatment than at baseline (IV). There was interpatient variability, however: 26% of the patients required greater doses SC than IV following 13 to 16 weeks of SC treatment, and 15% required greater doses SC than IV following 21 to 24 weeks. On completing the initial SC three-times-per-week stage of the study, patients were randomized to one of three SC dosing strategies for an additional 12 weeks: (1) once per week, (2) three times per week Epoetin alfa diluted 1:2 with bacteriostatic saline to mitigate stinging at the injection site, or (3) continued three times per week with undiluted Epoetin alfa. Patients who were switched to administration of SC once per week undiluted Epoetin alfa (n = 20) had their total weekly dose lowered by 18.0% +/- 9.4% (P > 0.05), but the mean hematocrit for this cohort also decreased, from 34.3% +/- 3.0% to 32.4% +/- 3.9% (P > 0.05), rendering dose comparison between the two schedules ambiguous. The maintenance dose for patients who received Epoetin alfa diluted 1:2 with bacteriostatic saline (n = 23) did not differ from the undiluted three times per week dose at the end of stage 1. The third cohort of patients (n = 24), who continued to receive undiluted Epoetin alfa on the same SC three-times-per-week schedule, did not require a significant change in dosage over the ensuing 12 weeks. Comparison of SC three times per week mean dosage after an average of 32 weeks following the switch from IV three times per week for this latter cohort revealed a decrease of 23.5% +/- 6.5% (P < 0.001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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