4.6 Article

End Point Considerations for Clinical Trials in Enteric Hyperoxaluria

Publisher

AMER SOC NEPHROLOGY
DOI: 10.2215/CJN.0000000000000234

Keywords

CKD

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Enteric hyperoxaluria is a medical condition associated with increased urinary oxalate excretion, leading to kidney stone events and kidney failure. Currently, there are no approved therapies for this condition and it is unclear how to evaluate the efficacy of potential treatments. This study reviews potential clinical outcome measures and surrogate endpoints, but gaps in the data prevent definitive recommendations from being made.
Enteric hyperoxaluria is a medical condition characterized by elevated urinary oxalate excretion due to increased gastrointestinal oxalate absorption. Causative features include fat malabsorption and/or increased intestinal permeability to oxalate. Enteric hyperoxaluria has long been known to cause nephrolithiasis and nephrocalcinosis, and, more recently, an association with CKD and kidney failure has been shown. Currently, there are no US Food and Drug Administration-approved therapies for enteric hyperoxaluria, and it is unclear what end points should be used to evaluate the efficacy of new drugs and biologics for this condition. This study represents work of a multidisciplinary group convened by the Kidney Health Initiative to review the evidence supporting potential end points for clinical trials in enteric hyperoxaluria. A potential clinical outcome is symptomatic kidney stone events. Potential surrogate end points include (1) an irreversible loss of kidney function as a surrogate for progression to kidney failure, (2) asymptomatic kidney stone growth/new stone formation observed on imaging as a surrogate for symptomatic kidney stone events, (3) urinary oxalate and urinary calcium oxalate supersaturation as surrogates for the development of symptomatic kidney stone events, and (4) plasma oxalate as a surrogate for the development of the clinical manifestations of systemic oxalosis. Unfortunately, because of gaps in the data, this Kidney Health Initiative workgroup was unable to provide definitive recommendations. Work is underway to obtain robust information that can be used to inform trial design and medical product development in this space.

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