Do oral potassium-exchanging compounds (patiromer and sodium zirconium cyclosilicate) normalize serum potassium in hyperkalemic patients treated with RAAS blockers?
New oral potassium binders effectively manage hyperkalemia, potentially allowing patients with CKD and HF to safely continue cardio- and renoprotective RAAS blockade.
In recent randomized clinical studies, two new oral potassium-exchanging compounds, patiromer and sodium zirconium cyclosilicate, were shown to effectively normalize elevated serum potassium and chronically maintain potassium homeostasis in hyperkalemic patients treated with RAAS blockers. Both agents exhibit good tolerability and were not associated with serious adverse effects. Although additional research is required, these drugs are promising for lowering the risk of incident hyperkalemia associated with RAAS blockade use in people with diabetes or HF who have CKD. They also provide the opportunity to test whether patients who could not previously receive RAAS blockade may benefit from their cardio- and renoprotective effects.
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Expert Opinion on Pharmacotherapy
University of Chicago
Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
Hypertension Institute
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Sarafidis et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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