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Statins do not affect mineral metabolism in chronic kidney disease: a retrospective analysis.

It has recently been proposed that statins act as vitamin D analogs in binding the ubiquitously expressed vitamin D receptor, accounting for the perceived pleiotropic effects of statins (a reduction in cancer risk, prevention of organ transplant rejection and autoimmune disease). Chronic kidney disease (CKD) offers a useful test of this hypothesis: serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels are insufficient (<75 nmol/l) in as many as 76% of patients with advanced CKD, associated with secondary hyperparathyroidism and reduced bone mineralization. Vitamin D suppresses parathyroid hormone (PTH) secretion in part through its action on the vitamin D receptor. If statins act as vitamin D analogs, they may then be able to suppress PTH secretion in CKD. We examined data on 714 vitamin D analog naïve patients with stage 3-4 CKD. 404 patients were treated with a statin indicated almost exclusively for primary prevention of coronary heart disease, and 310 patients were not. Both groups were similar in characteristics. Statins had no effect on the intact PTH concentration, the percentage of patients achieving K/DOQI PTH targets, or on calcium or phosphate concentrations. In patients with stage 3-4 CKD, statins had no effect on secondary hyperparathyroidism. If the hypothesis contending that statins act as vitamin D analogs to exert pleiotropic effects is true, this is of no clinical benefit in the prevention of secondary hyperparathyroidism in CKD.

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