1. Peginesatide for Anemia in Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease Not Receiving Dialysis
- Author
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Pablo E. Pergola, Pearl Study Groups, Bruce Spinowitz, A.M. Duliege, Robert Provenzano, Steven Fishbane, Krishna R. Polu, Sandra Tong-Starksen, Iain C. Macdougall, Rebecca J. Schmidt, R. Zabaneh, Amit Sharma, Martha Mayo, and Hong Tang
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Darbepoetin alfa ,Anemia ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Peginesatide ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,law.invention ,Surgery ,Randomized controlled trial ,Erythropoietin ,law ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,business ,Dialysis ,Kidney disease ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Peginesatide is a peptide-based erythropoiesis-stimulating agent (ESA) that may have therapeutic potential for anemia in patients with advanced chronic kidney disease. We evaluated the safety and efficacy of peginesatide, as compared with another ESA, darbepoetin, in 983 such patients who were not undergoing dialysis. Methods In two randomized, controlled, open-label studies (PEARL 1 and 2), patients received peginesatide once a month, at a starting dose of 0.025 mg or 0.04 mg per kilogram of body weight, or darbepoetin once every 2 weeks, at a starting dose of 0.75 μg per kilogram. Doses of both drugs were adjusted to achieve and maintain hemoglobin levels between 11.0 and 12.0 g per deciliter for 52 weeks or more. The primary efficacy end point was the mean change from the baseline hemoglobin level to the mean level during the evaluation period; noninferiority was established if the lower limit of the two-sided 97.5% confidence interval was −1.0 g per deciliter or higher. Cardiovascular safet...
- Published
- 2013
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