Abstract
Background Elevated calcium and phosphorus levels after therapy with injectable vitamin D for secondary hyperparathyroidism may accelerate vascular disease and hasten death in patients undergoing long-term hemodialysis. Paricalcitol, a new vitamin D analogue, appears to lessen the elevations in serum calcium and phosphorus levels, as compared with calcitriol, the standard form of injectable vitamin D. Methods We conducted a historical cohort study to compare the 36-month survival rate among patients undergoing long-term hemodialysis who started to receive treatment with paricalcitol (29,021 patients) or calcitriol (38,378 patients) between 1999 and 2001. Crude and adjusted survival rates were calculated and stratified analyses were performed. A subgroup of 16,483 patients who switched regimens was also evaluated. Results The mortality rate among patients receiving paricalcitol was 3417 per 19,031 person-years (0.180 per person-year), as compared with 6805 per 30,471 person-years (0.223 per person-year) am...
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CITATION STYLE
Teng, M., Wolf, M., Lowrie, E., Ofsthun, N., Lazarus, J. M., & Thadhani, R. (2003). Survival of Patients Undergoing Hemodialysis with Paricalcitol or Calcitriol Therapy. New England Journal of Medicine, 349(5), 446–456. https://doi.org/10.1056/nejmoa022536
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