Chelation therapy for patients with elevated body lead burden and progressive renal insufficiency: A randomized, controlled trial

Ja Liang Lin*, Huei Huang Ho, Chun Chen Yu

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Article peer-review

56 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Nephropathy is known to occur in persons exposed to high levels of lead, but the question of whether long-term exposure to low levels of environmental lead is associated with impaired renal function remains controversial. Objective: To examine whether chelation therapy slows the progression of renal insufficiency in patients with mildly elevated body lead burden. Design: Randomized, controlled trial. Setting: Academic medical center in Taiwan. Patients: 32 patients with chronic renal insufficiency (serum creatinine level > 132.6 μmol/L [1.5 mg/dL] and < 353.8 μmol/L [4.0 mg/dL]), mildly elevated body lead burden (>0.72 μmol [150 μg] of lead per 72-hour urine collection and < 2.90 μmol [600 μg] of lead per 72-hour urine collection [EDTA mobilization tests]), and no history of heavy lead exposure. Intervention: The treatment group received 2 months of chelation therapy; the control group received no therapy. Measurements: The reciprocal of serum creatinine (1/Cr) was used as an index of progressive renal insufficiency. Results: Rates of progression of renal insufficiency were similar in the treatment group and the control group during a 12-month baseline observation period (1/Cr, 0.000054 L/μmol per month compared with 0.000046 L/μmol per month; P > 0.2). After the 2-month treatment period, improvement in renal function was greater in the treatment group than in the control group. In the 12 months after the treatment period, renal insufficiency progressed more slowly in the treatment group than in the control group (1/Cr, 0.000033 ± 0.00038 L/μmol per month compared with 0.000045 ± 0.000038 L/μmol per month; P = 0.0030). Conclusion: Chelation therapy seems to slow the progression of renal insufficiency in patients with mildly elevated body lead burden. This implies that long-term exposure to low levels of environmental lead may be associated with impaired renal function in patients with chronic renal disease.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)7-13
Number of pages7
JournalAnnals of Internal Medicine
Volume130
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 05 01 1999
Externally publishedYes

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