Background: We recently reported that administration of high doses of lanthanum carbonate (1000 mg/kg/day) to chronic renal failure (CRF) rats can result in a mineralization defect. Our results suggested, however, that the impaired mineralization was not due to a direct toxic action of lanthanum on the bone, but rather was an indirect consequence of a phosphate depletion resulting from the compound's high phosphate-binding capacity. To further substantiate these results, in the present study, the effects of lanthanum carbonate on bone were compared to the effects of sevelamer, a nonabsorbed, non-metal-containing polymeric phosphate-binding agent.
Methods: Male Wistar rats underwent a 5/6th nephrectomy to induce chronic renal failure, after which they were treated with either sevelamer (500 or 1000 mg/kg/day) or lanthanum carbonate (1000 mg/kg/day) by oral gavage for 12 weeks.
Results: CRF animals treated with either sevelamer (500 or 1000 mg/kg/day) or lanthanum carbonate (1000 mg/kg/day) developed a phosphate depletion after 4 weeks of treatment, as evidenced by a marked reduction in phosphaturia. At sacrifice after 12 weeks of treatment, bone histomorphometry showed that a mineralization defect had developed in two out of six animals in the lanthanum-carbonate-treated group, in four out of seven animals in the 1000 mg/kg/ day sevelamer group, and in one out of nine animals in the 500 mg/kg/day sevelamer group.
Conclusions: These results corroborate our previous findings that the administration of a powerful phosphate-binding agent to CRF rats can induce phosphate depletion, resulting in a mineralization defect.