The Emerging Fourth Threat to Kidney Health

2025-07-18 Educational • 作者:laoliu147

While proteinuria, hypertension, and progressive kidney failure have long been recognized as the three primary threats to kidney health, recent research has identified a fourth significant risk factor: elevated levels of fibroblast growth factor-23 (FGF-23).

Understanding FGF-23

FGF-23 is a phosphate-regulating hormone first identified in patients with hypophosphatemic rickets. This hormone plays a crucial role in the phosphorus abnormalities commonly seen in kidney failure patients.

Groundbreaking Research Findings

A landmark 20-year study (1990-2010) conducted by Rebholz et al. at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health followed 13,448 participants, tracking their FGF-23 levels and kidney survival rates.

The results were striking:

  • Patients were divided into quintiles (Q1-Q5) based on FGF-23 levels
  • Clear inverse correlation: Higher FGF-23 levels corresponded with lower kidney survival rates
  • The Q5 group (highest FGF-23 levels) showed the poorest outcomes

Therapeutic Potential: Lowering FGF-23

Current evidence suggests that reducing FGF-23 levels may:

  1. Preserve kidney function
  2. Decrease mortality risk in ESRD patients
  3. Improve overall survival

While no FGF-23-specific medications exist yet, researchers have discovered that:

  • Non-calcium-based phosphate binders (e.g., lanthanum carbonate) can reduce FGF-23
  • Calcium-based binders (e.g., calcium carbonate) show no such effect

Clinical Evidence:

  1. Taiwanese RCT: After 24 weeks:
  • Lanthanum carbonate group showed significant FGF-23 reduction
  • Calcium carbonate group showed no change
  1. Japanese Retrospective Study (2008-2011, n=2,292 dialysis patients):
  • 48% higher survival rate with lanthanum carbonate vs other phosphate binders

Current Limitations and Future Directions

While promising, several questions remain:

  1. Patient Selection: At what CKD stage does FGF-23 elevation begin? (Studies suggest GFR 80, 60, or 30)
  2. Treatment Thresholds: Optimal FGF-23 target levels remain undefined
  3. Causality: No definitive proof that FGF-23 reduction directly improves kidney function
  4. Drug Development: No medications specifically designed to lower FGF-23

Practical Recommendations for Patients

  1. For kidney failure patients with hyperphosphatemia:
  • Non-calcium phosphate binders (lanthanum carbonate, sevelamer) may improve survival
  • Treatment decisions should be individualized with nephrologist guidance
  1. Until FGF-23-targeted therapies emerge:
  • Continue optimal management of traditional risk factors (proteinuria, hypertension)
  • Monitor kidney function regularly

The Future of FGF-23 Research

The scientific community is actively working to:

  • Develop FGF-23-specific medications
  • Establish clear treatment guidelines
  • Validate the causal relationship between FGF-23 reduction and kidney outcomes

FGF-23 shows tremendous promise as a future therapeutic target for chronic kidney disease.


Key Adaptations for American Audience:

  1. Simplified Terminology: Used “kidney failure” instead of “uremia” for clarity
  2. Cultural Context: Emphasized ESRD/dialysis (more familiar to U.S. patients)
  3. Structure: Added subheadings and bullet points for better readability
  4. Visuals: Maintained original images with captions for scientific credibility
  5. Measurement Units: Used GFR (glomerular filtration rate) which is standard in U.S. nephrology
  6. Professional Tone: Balanced scientific accuracy with patient-friendly language

This version maintains all key scientific information while making it accessible to an English-speaking audience. Let me know if you’d like any modifications to better suit your website’s style.

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