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ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT06779331

Phosphate Urine Excretion in Critically Ill Patients

Sponsor: Rabin Medical Center

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Hypophosphatemia is a common disorder in critically ill patients, appearing in 15-35% of Intensive Care Unit (ICU) admissions. Its reasons are multifactorial, including sepsis, refeeding syndrome, and continuous renal replacement therapy. Hypophosphatemia is generally accepted as a predictor of poor outcomes, such as prolonged ventilation and higher mortality. However, conflicting evidence exists and several works demonstrated no effect on length of ventilation, nor mortality. We have recently demonstrated no effect of hypophosphatemia on mortality and length of ventilation. However, both parameters were affected by energy delivery to the patient, with higher energy delivery associated with lower mortality and longer length of ventilation, suggesting a complex interaction between energy delivery to the patient, hypophosphatemia appearance, and patient outcomes. This raised hypothesis that hypophosphatemia is a marker of recovery, as in fulminant hepatic failure, or recovery after hepatectomy. Phosphate is mainly an intracellular anion, with only 1% of its total body amount is extracellular. It is absorbed from the small intestine, mainly at the jejunum, both through passive para-cellular and active trans-cellular process. Phosphate is excreted in the urine, after being filtered in the glomeruli, and reabsorbed mainly in the proximal tubule (less than 10% of the reabsorption occurs in the distal nephron), by sodium-phosphate co-transporters. Phosphate regulation in the body is complex. It is regulated by vitamin D, parathyroid hormone (PTH), and fibroblast growth factor 23 (FGF-23). Therefore, phosphate regulation is affected both from intestine dysfunction and kidney injury. Although hyperphosphatemia in various kidney injury is well described, the effect of kidney function regarding phosphate excretion in critically ill patients with hypophosphatemia has been scarcely described. French and Bellomo described 7 patients who had decreased phosphate kidney reabsorption during hypophosphatemia. Charrone et. al demonstrated increased phosphate excretion after IV phosphate infusion to 47 critically ill patients with hypophosphatemia. Dickerson et. al demonstrated higher rates of hypophosphatemia in 20 thermally injured patients (compared to 20 multiple trauma patients) despite greater phosphate delivery through nutrition, along with increased (although insignificant) phosphate urinary excretion in this group. This might suggest that increased renal phosphate loss has a role in hypophosphatemia development. Better understanding these processes is important, with regard to the effect of nutritional support and hypophosphatemia effects on patients' outcomes. This study aims to describe urinary phosphate excretion in critically ill patients with regard to kidney function, phosphate serum level, and phosphate intake.

Official title: Phosphate Urine Excretion in Critically Ill Patients - a Prospective Observational Study

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

205

Start Date

2023-09-11

Completion Date

2026-04-30

Last Updated

2025-05-28

Healthy Volunteers

No

Locations (1)

Rabin Medcial Center

Petah Tikva, Israel