Table 1. Clinical studies regarding the efficacy and safety of sodium polystyrene sulfonate.
Author (Year) | Groups studied and intervention | Results and findings | Conclusions |
Lepage et al. [14] | Patients with CKD and mild hyperkalemia were administered oral 30 g SPS or placebo once/day for 7 days | The mean difference between groups -1.04 mEq/L with a 95% confidence interval (-1.37 to – 0.71) | SPS was superior to placebo. |
Hasara et al. [15] | Patients presenting to the ED with hyperkalemia were administered SPS or SZC | The mean change in serum potassium from baseline to repeat level was -1.1mEq/L for both groups | SPS and SZC administration resulted in a similar reduction of serum potassium. |
Nguyen et al. [16] | For Adult patients (18+) admitted for acute hyperkalemia, a dose of patiromer (8.4 g or 16.8 g) or SPS (15 g or 30 g) administered | The mean SD potassium reduction was higher when using SPS compared to patiromer 0.76 (0.63) mEq/L vs 0.32 (0.65) mEq/L, (P = .001) | SPS demonstrated a clinically significant reduction in serum potassium compared to patiromer. |