Elsevier

Kidney International

Volume 60, Issue 1, July 2001, Pages 266-271
Kidney International

Clinical Nephrology – Epidemiology – Clinical Trials
Lead chelation therapy and urate excretion in patients with chronic renal diseases and gout

https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1523-1755.2001.00795.xGet rights and content
Under an Elsevier user license
open archive

Lead chelation therapy and urate excretion in patients with chronic renal diseases and gout.

Background

It is known that chronic renal insufficiency (CRI) patients with gout may have subtle lead poisoning. In addition, gout episodes frequently aggravate progressive renal insufficiency because of the use of nephrotoxic drugs and urate deposition. Our study was arranged to evaluate the causal effect of environmental lead exposure on urate excretion in CRI patients.

Methods

A cross-section study and a randomized, controlled trial were performed. Initially, 101 patients with CRI and without a history of previous lead exposure received ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid mobilization tests to assess body lead stores (BLS). Then, a clinical trial was performed; 30 CRI patients with gout and high-normal BLS and the changes of urate excretion in these patients were compared before and after lead chelating therapy. The treated group received four-week chelating therapy, and the control group received a placebo therapy.

Results

The BLS of patients with CRI and gout was higher than that of patients with CRI only, and none had subtle lead poisoning. The BLS, not the blood lead level (BLL), significantly correlated to indices of urate excretion in all CRI patients after related factors were adjusted. In addition, after lead chelating therapy, urate clearance markedly improved after a reduction of the BLS of patients with CRI and gout (study group 67.9 ± 80.0% vs. control group 1.2 ± 34.0%, P = 0.0056).

Conclusion

Our findings suggest that the chronic low-level environmental lead exposure may interfere with urate excretion of CRI patients. Importantly, the inhibition of urate excretion can be markedly improved by lead chelating therapies. These data shed light on additional treatment of CRI patients with gout; however, more studies are needed to confirm our findings.

Keywords

environmental lead exposure
chronic renal insufficiency
nephrotoxicity
pollutant
serum urate

Cited by (0)