Fujita Medical Journal (Nov 2021)

Vitamin K2 supplementation and the progression of abdominal aortic calcification in dialysis patients

  • Shoya Oyama,
  • Naoki Okamoto,
  • Shigehisa Koide,
  • Hiroki Hayashi,
  • Shigeru Nakai,
  • Kazuo Takahashi,
  • Daijo Inaguma,
  • Midori Hasegawa,
  • Hiroshi Toyama,
  • Satoshi Sugiyama,
  • Yukio Yuzawa,
  • Naotake Tsuboi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.20407/fmj.2020-020
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 4
pp. 136 – 138

Abstract

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Objectives: Vascular calcification is common in patients with advanced chronic kidney disease (CKD) and contributes to cardiovascular disease. Accumulating evidence indicates that CKD patients often acquire subclinical vitamin K deficiency, which is associated with vascular calcification. Methods: This prospective, randomized, parallel group, multicenter trial (UMINID000011490) will include 200 dialysis patients in an open-label, two-arm design. After baseline computed tomography of the abdominal aorta, patients will be randomized to two groups that will either (1) continue receiving standard care or (2) receive additional oral supplementation with menatetrenone (45 mg/day). The treatment duration will be 24 months, and the computed tomography scan will be repeated after 12 and 24 months. The primary endpoint is the progression of abdominal aortic calcification, which is calculated as absolute changes based on the Agatston score. The secondary endpoints are the decrease in bone mineral density (measured by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry), the biomarkers associated with vitamin K, vitamin K intake (evaluated by the food frequency questionnaire), and the biomarkers associated with vascular calcification. Conclusions: This study aims to confirm whether vitamin K has inhibitory effects on calcification that can be clinically determined. Trial registration: UMINID000011490.

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