Pragmatic Randomised Trial of High Or Standard PHosphAte Targets in End-stage Kidney Disease (PHOSPHATE)
3600 patients around the world
Available in Brazil
Hyperphosphataemia is highly prevalent in patients with end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) and
associated with increased mortality risk. The Clinical Practice Guidelines suggest lowering
elevated phosphate levels towards the normal range (level 2C suggestion). However, trial data
demonstrating that treatments that lower serum phosphate will improve patient-centred
outcomes are lacking.
The primary objective is to test the hypothesis that compared to a liberal serum phosphate
concentration target of 2.0 to 2.5 mmol/L, intensive lowering of serum phosphate towards the
normal level (≤1.50 mmol/L) with phosphate binders reduces the risk of fatal or non-fatal
major cardiovascular events in ESKD patients receiving dialysis. The secondary objectives are
to test the hypothesis that intensive lowering of serum phosphate towards the normal level
with phosphate binders would improve physical health, fatigue, health-related quality of
life, patient satisfaction, and pruritus; and be cost-effective.
In this pragmatic, multinational, randomised controlled large simple trial, a total of 3600
adult ESKD patients receiving dialysis will be randomised either to intensive (≤1.50 mmol/L)
or liberalized (2.0-2.5 mmol/L) serum phosphate target. The choice and dose of phosphate
binders will be at the treating physician's discretion and local practice to achieve and
maintain serum phosphate concentration within the required target range according to
randomisation. The primary endpoint is the composite endpoint of cardiovascular death,
non-fatal major cardiovascular or peripheral arterial events. The secondary outcome measures
will be individual components of the primary composite endpoint, all-cause death, and
utility-based quality of life EQ5D-5L.