Effects of Short-Term Potassium Chloride Supplementation in Patients with CKD

Martin Gritter(Erasmus MC), Rosa D. Wouda(Amsterdam University Medical Centers), Stanley M.H. Yeung(University Medical Center Groningen), Michiel L. A. J. Wieërs(Erasmus MC), Frank Geurts(Erasmus MC), Maria de Ridder(Erasmus MC), Christian Ramakers(Erasmus MC), Liffert Vogt(Amsterdam University Medical Centers), Martin H. de Borst(University Medical Center Groningen), Joris I. Rotmans(Leiden University Medical Center), Ewout J. Hoorn(Erasmus MC)
Journal of the American Society of Nephrology
May 24, 2022
Cited by 62Open Access
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Abstract

Background Observational studies suggest that adequate dietary potassium intake (90–120 mmol/day) may be renoprotective, but the effects of increasing dietary potassium and the risk of hyperkalemia are unknown. Methods This is a prespecified analysis of the run-in phase of a clinical trial in which 191 patients (age 68±11 years, 74% males, 86% European ancestry, eGFR 31±9 ml/min per 1.73 m 2 , 83% renin-angiotensin system inhibitors, 38% diabetes) were treated with 40 mmol potassium chloride (KCl) per day for 2 weeks. Results KCl supplementation significantly increased urinary potassium excretion (72±24 to 107±29 mmol/day), plasma potassium (4.3±0.5 to 4.7±0.6 mmol/L), and plasma aldosterone (281 [198–431] to 351 [241–494] ng/L), but had no significant effect on urinary sodium excretion, plasma renin, BP, eGFR, or albuminuria. Furthermore, KCl supplementation increased plasma chloride (104±3 to 105±4 mmol/L) and reduced plasma bicarbonate (24.5±3.4 to 23.7±3.5 mmol/L) and urine pH (all P <0.001), but did not change urinary ammonium excretion. In total, 21 participants (11%) developed hyperkalemia (plasma potassium 5.9±0.4 mmol/L). They were older and had higher baseline plasma potassium. Conclusions In patients with CKD stage G3b–4, increasing dietary potassium intake to recommended levels with potassium chloride supplementation raises plasma potassium by 0.4 mmol/L. This may result in hyperkalemia in older patients or those with higher baseline plasma potassium. Longer-term studies should address whether cardiorenal protection outweighs the risk of hyperkalemia. Clinical trial number: NCT03253172


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