Melanie Douglas is a Physician Assistant in the Medicine Department at NYU Langone Medical Center in New York, New York. Denise Rizzolo is a Clinical Assistant Professor in the PA Program at Pace University in New York, New York, and Research Director in the Program of PA Studies at Kean University in Union, New Jersey. Danielle Kruger is an Academic Coordinator and Associate Professor in the PA Program at St. John’s University in Queens, New York. The authors have no financial relationships to disclose.
References
NEW DRUG DEVELOPMENTS
A potassium binder approved for daily use would benefit patients on aggressive heart failure medication regimens, as hyperkalemia commonly occurs with these regimens. As discussed, the widely available potassium binder SPS has been associated with severe gastrointestinal adverse effects, limiting its potential for routine use.44,45 In clinical trials, new potassium binders patiromer and zirconium cyclosilicate (ZS-9) have demonstrated an ability to maintain normokalemia over weeks of therapy with acceptable adverse effect profiles.45 In 2015, patiromer was approved by the FDA as therapy for hyperkalemia.46 An in-depth discussion, which is outside the scope of this article, will be presented by experts in the April 2017 edition of Renal Consult.
CONCLUSION
The best treatment for hyperkalemia is prevention through close surveillance of at-risk patients. Clinicians should be aware of predisposing risk factors for hyperkalemia, as it can have an insidious onset, with symptoms manifesting only when this electrolyte imbalance becomes life-threatening. It is particularly important to recognize when this condition mandates emergent treatment so that critical cardiac arrhythmias can be prevented.26