Table of contents
- Clinical trials overview
- Pediatric study in chronic kidney disease
- Cardiometabolism study
- Study design and main measures
- Who the trials are for
- Key terms explained
Clinical trials overview
These clinical trials are studying Roxadustat in different patient groups and for different health problems.[1][2] Both studies are Phase 3 and are listed as Authorised.[1][2] One trial focuses on anemia in children and adolescents with chronic kidney disease, and the other focuses on cardiometabolic risk in people with cardiovascular disease risk factors and metabolic syndrome.[1][2]
Pediatric study in chronic kidney disease
The pediatric study is an open-label, uncontrolled Phase 3 trial for participants with anemia associated with chronic kidney disease.[2] It includes children and adolescents, and the brief summary says the goal is to evaluate the activity of Roxadustat for treating anemia in this group.[2]
This trial plans to enroll 104 participants.[2] The main outcome is the change in hemoglobin from the start of treatment to the average level during treatment weeks 20 to 24.[2] The treatment period is described as 24 weeks, with 4 weeks of fixed dose treatment followed by 20 weeks of dose titration, which means the dose is adjusted over time.[2]
Cardiometabolism study
The second trial is a Phase 3 interventional study called Effect of Roxadustat on Cardiometabolism.[1] It studies people with risk factors of cardiovascular disease and metabolic syndrome.[1] The brief summary says the study is looking at the effects of Roxadustat on glucose and lipid metabolism and on cardiovascular function.[1]
This study plans to enroll 24 participants.[1] Its primary outcome is plasma total cholesterol levels.[1] The intervention list includes placebo and Roxadustat, which shows that the study is comparing treatment conditions.[1]
Study design and main measures
Both trials are designed to measure specific results, called endpoints, so researchers can judge the effect of Roxadustat in each study population.[1][2] In the pediatric trial, the key endpoint is hemoglobin change, which helps show whether anemia is improving.[2] In the cardiometabolism trial, the key endpoint is total cholesterol in plasma, which helps show changes in blood fat levels.[1]
The trial data also show different study styles.[1][2] One study is open-label and uncontrolled, while the other includes placebo, so the research designs are not the same.[1][2]
Who the trials are for
The pediatric trial is for children and adolescents with anemia linked to chronic kidney disease.[2] The cardiometabolism trial is for people with cardiovascular risk factors and metabolic syndrome.[1] These groups are different, so the studies are not asking the same question in the same type of patient.[1][2]
Children and adolescents with chronic kidney disease: this group is studied to see whether Roxadustat helps anemia improve over time.[2]
People with cardiometabolic risk: this group is studied to see whether Roxadustat affects cholesterol, glucose and lipid metabolism, and cardiovascular function.[1]
Key terms explained
Chronic kidney disease means a long-term kidney problem.[2] Anemia means the blood has too little hemoglobin, so it may carry less oxygen.[2] Metabolic syndrome is a group of health problems that raise the risk of heart disease and diabetes.[1] Cardiovascular function refers to how the heart and blood vessels work.[1]


