Drug Monograph

Paricalcitol (Zemplar)

paricalcitol — 19-nor-1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D2

Selective Vitamin D Analog·Oral & Intravenous·VDR Agonist
Pharmacokinetic Profile
Half-Life
4–6 h (healthy); 14–20 h (CKD 3–5)
Metabolism
CYP24, CYP3A4, UGT1A4
Protein Binding
≥99.8%
Bioavailability
~72% (healthy); 79% (HD); 86% (PD)
Volume of Distribution
~23.8 L (healthy, IV)
Clinical Information
Drug Class
Selective vitamin D2 analog (19-nor)
Available Doses
Oral: 1 mcg, 2 mcg capsules. IV: 2 mcg/mL, 5 mcg/mL injection
Route
Oral, Intravenous
Renal Adjustment
Dose by indication/CKD stage; HD does not affect PK
Hepatic Adjustment
None for mild/moderate; not studied in severe
Pregnancy
Limited human data; embryofetal loss at 0.5–2× MRHD in animals
Lactation
Breastfeeding not recommended
Schedule
Prescription only (not controlled)
Generic Available
Yes (oral capsules and IV injection)
Rx

Indications

IndicationApproved PopulationTherapy TypeStatus
Secondary HPT in CKD Stages 3 and 4 (predialysis)Adults and pediatric patients ≥10 yearsOral (daily or TIW)FDA Approved
Secondary HPT in CKD Stage 5 on hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysisAdults and pediatric patients ≥10 yearsOral (TIW) or IV (TIW via HD access)FDA Approved

Paricalcitol is a synthetic 19-nor-1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D2 analog that selectively activates the vitamin D receptor (VDR). Structurally modified at the A-ring (19-nor) and side chain (D2 configuration) compared to calcitriol, paricalcitol retains potent PTH-suppressing activity while producing less hypercalcemia and hyperphosphatemia at equivalent PTH-lowering doses. This selectivity profile makes paricalcitol a preferred vitamin D receptor agonist in CKD-MBD management, particularly where calcitriol-associated calcium and phosphorus elevations limit therapy. Paricalcitol is approved for both prevention and treatment of secondary hyperparathyroidism across CKD Stages 3 through 5, with iPTH-based dosing formulas that individualize therapy from the outset (FDA PI).

Off-Label Uses

No well-established off-label indications exist for paricalcitol. Investigational interest has explored its potential anti-proteinuric and cardioprotective effects in CKD, but clinical trial data remain insufficient for routine clinical use outside the approved indications. Evidence quality: Low.

Dose

Dosing

Oral Dosing — CKD Stages 3 and 4 (Adults)

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Baseline iPTH ≤500 pg/mL1 mcg PO daily or 2 mcg PO TIWTitrate per iPTH responseIndividualizedTitrate q2–4 wk: increase by 1 mcg (daily) or 2 mcg (TIW) if iPTH unchanged or decreased <30%; maintain if decreased 30–60%; decrease if >60% or iPTH <60 pg/mL
TIW = no more frequently than every other day
Baseline iPTH >500 pg/mL2 mcg PO daily or 4 mcg PO TIWTitrate per iPTH responseIndividualizedSame titration algorithm as above
If on 1 mcg daily and needs further reduction: switch to 1 mcg TIW, then withhold if further reduction needed

Oral Dosing — CKD Stage 5 on Dialysis (Adults)

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
CKD Stage 5 (HD or PD) — iPTH-based initiationiPTH (pg/mL) ÷ 80 mcg PO TIWMost recent iPTH ÷ 80 mcg TIW (adjusted for Ca)IndividualizedBaseline serum Ca must be ≤9.5 mg/dL before starting; if Ca elevated, decrease dose by 2–4 mcg; for less frequent monitoring, use iPTH ÷ 100
TIW = no more frequently than every other day

IV Dosing — CKD Stage 5 on Hemodialysis (Adults)

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Baseline iPTH <500 pg/mL0.04 mcg/kg IV bolus TIWTitrate by 2–4 mcg at 2–4 wk intervalsIndividualized (up to 0.24 mcg/kg)Administer as bolus dose no more frequently than QOD at any time during dialysis
Typical adult initial dose: 2.8–7 mcg (0.04–0.1 mcg/kg)
Baseline iPTH ≥500 pg/mL0.08 mcg/kg IV bolus TIWTitrate by 2–4 mcg at 2–4 wk intervalsIndividualizedSame administration rules as above
Mean dose in phase 3 studies: 7.5 mcg TIW (long-term)

Pediatric Dosing (Ages 10–16 Years)

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
CKD Stages 3–4 (oral)1 mcg PO TIWIncrease by 1 mcg TIW q4wk per iPTHIndividualizedDecrease by 1 mcg at any time; stop if on 1 mcg TIW and further reduction needed
Not established for <10 years
CKD Stage 5 (oral, HD/PD)iPTH (pg/mL) ÷ 120 mcg PO TIWIncrease by 1 mcg TIW q4wk per iPTHIndividualizedDecrease by 2 mcg at any time; round initial dose down to nearest whole number
Not established for <10 years
Clinical Pearl: iPTH-Based Dosing Formulas

Paricalcitol uses a unique iPTH-based dosing formula for CKD Stage 5 patients: Dose (mcg) = iPTH (pg/mL) ÷ 80 for adults (or ÷ 120 for pediatric patients). This approach individualizes the starting dose from the outset, proportional to disease severity. For patients monitored less frequently than weekly, the FDA PI suggests using a more conservative ratio of iPTH ÷ 100 to minimize hypercalcemia risk. Always confirm baseline serum calcium is ≤9.5 mg/dL before initiating therapy in CKD Stage 5 patients.

PK

Pharmacology

Mechanism of Action

Paricalcitol is a synthetic vitamin D2 analog of calcitriol with two key structural modifications: removal of the C-19 methylene group (19-nor) and a D2 side chain. These modifications result in selective activation of vitamin D responsive pathways through VDR binding while producing less stimulation of intestinal calcium and phosphorus absorption compared to calcitriol. Paricalcitol suppresses PTH synthesis and secretion by activating VDR on parathyroid chief cells, reducing PTH gene transcription. In clinical studies, paricalcitol achieved a mean iPTH reduction of 30% within 6 weeks while maintaining a comparable incidence of hypercalcemia and hyperphosphatemia to placebo, reflecting its selectivity advantage over non-selective vitamin D receptor agonists.

ADME Profile

ParameterValueClinical Implication
AbsorptionWell absorbed orally; absolute bioavailability ~72% (healthy), 79% (HD), 86% (PD); Tmax ~3 h; food delays Tmax by ~2 h but does not affect AUC or Cmax; dose-proportional over 0.06–0.48 mcg/kgCan be taken without regard to food; dose-proportional kinetics allow predictable titration
Distribution≥99.8% bound to plasma proteins; Vd ~23.8 L (healthy subjects, IV); crosses placenta in rats; present in rat milkHigh protein binding limits free drug; relatively small Vd compared to calcitriol
MetabolismExtensively metabolized (~98%) by multiple hepatic and non-hepatic enzymes: CYP24 (mitochondrial), CYP3A4, and UGT1A4; identified metabolites include 24(R)-hydroxy paricalcitol (less active), 24,26- and 24,28-dihydroxy products, and direct glucuronide conjugates; no accumulation with TIW dosing (IV)CYP3A4 involvement means strong CYP3A inhibitors (ketoconazole) approximately double AUC and increase t½ from 9.8 h to 17 h; paricalcitol itself does not inhibit or induce CYP enzymes
EliminationPrimarily hepatobiliary excretion; oral: ~70% feces, ~18% urine; IV: ~63% feces, ~19% urine; t½ healthy: 4–6 h (oral), 5–7 h (IV); t½ CKD 3–5: 14–20 h (oral); t½ CKD 5: 13.9 h (HD, IV), 15.4 h (PD, IV); gender independentProlonged t½ in CKD means steady-state changes take longer; hemodialysis does not remove paricalcitol
SE

Side Effects

≥5%Common (CKD Stages 3–4, Oral)
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Diarrhea7%Vs 4% placebo; monitor hydration
Hypertension7%Vs 4% placebo; common in CKD population; monitor blood pressure
Viral infection7%Vs 7% placebo; no excess over placebo
Nausea6%Vs 4% placebo; usually mild
Edema6%Vs 4% placebo; assess volume status
Hypersensitivity6%Vs 2% placebo; includes rash and urticaria
Vertigo5%Vs 0% placebo; notable difference from placebo
Arthritis5%Vs 0% placebo
Dizziness5%Vs 4% placebo
Headache5%Vs 4% placebo
Vomiting5%Vs 4% placebo
Hypotension5%Vs 3% placebo
≥5%Common (CKD Stage 5, Oral)
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Diarrhea11%Vs 11% placebo; no excess
Nasopharyngitis8%Vs 7% placebo; minor excess
Dizziness7%Vs 0% placebo; notable difference
Vomiting7%Vs 0% placebo
Constipation5%Vs 0% placebo
Insomnia5%Vs 0% placebo
Fluid overload5%Vs 0% placebo; common in dialysis population
Peritonitis5%Vs 0% placebo; in PD patients
SeriousSerious (Regardless of Frequency)
Adverse EffectEstimated FrequencyTypical OnsetRequired Action
HypercalcemiaDose-dependent; overall Ca >10.3 mg/dL in 7% (vs 7% placebo) in IV studies; 23% of pediatric CKD5 patients (2+ consecutive Ca >10.2)Days to weeks after initiation or dose increaseReduce or withhold paricalcitol; stop calcium supplements; lower dietary calcium; reinitiate at lower dose when calcium normalizes
Adynamic bone diseaseRisk with chronic PTH over-suppressionGradual; with sustained iPTH below targetReduce or discontinue paricalcitol and/or vitamin D sterols; resume at lower dose when iPTH returns to target range
Cardiac arrhythmias (digitalis-treated patients)Rare; mediated by hypercalcemiaVariableUse paricalcitol cautiously with digitalis; monitor calcium frequently
Angioedema (including laryngeal edema)Rare (postmarketing)Any timeDiscontinue permanently; emergency treatment as appropriate
Metastatic calcificationRare; associated with chronic hypercalcemia and elevated Ca × PChronic exposureControl Ca × P product; phosphate binders; discontinue if persistent elevation
DCDiscontinuation Rates
CKD Stages 3–4 (Oral, 24-Week Studies)
6% vs 4% placebo
Discontinuation due to any AE; overall AEs: 82% paricalcitol vs 76% placebo.
CKD Stage 5 (IV, Phase 3 Studies)
6.5% vs 2.0% placebo
Evaluated in 454 CKD Stage 5 patients receiving IV paricalcitol for 1–3 months.
Selectivity Advantage: Lower Hypercalcemia Risk

In the IV phase 3 studies, the overall incidence of serum calcium >10.3 mg/dL was 7% in both the paricalcitol and placebo groups, demonstrating that paricalcitol suppresses PTH effectively without the excess hypercalcemia typically seen with calcitriol at equivalent PTH-lowering doses. Nonetheless, monitoring remains essential, particularly in CKD Stage 5 patients where baseline calcium must be ≤9.5 mg/dL before initiation.

Int

Drug Interactions

Paricalcitol is partially metabolized by CYP3A4 but does not itself inhibit or induce any CYP or UGT enzymes at clinically relevant concentrations. The primary interaction concern is with strong CYP3A inhibitors, which approximately double paricalcitol exposure. Pharmacodynamic interactions with calcium-raising or vitamin D compounds also warrant attention.

MajorStrong CYP3A Inhibitors (ketoconazole, itraconazole, ritonavir, clarithromycin, etc.)
MechanismInhibit CYP3A4-mediated paricalcitol metabolism
EffectKetoconazole 200 mg BID for 5 days approximately doubled paricalcitol AUC; t½ increased from 9.8 h to 17.0 h; Cmax minimally affected
ManagementDose adjustment of paricalcitol may be needed; monitor iPTH and serum calcium more frequently when initiating or discontinuing a strong CYP3A inhibitor
FDA PI — DDI Study
MajorOther Vitamin D Compounds
MechanismAdditive vitamin D receptor activation increasing calcium and phosphorus absorption
EffectHypercalcemia, hypercalciuria, hyperphosphatemia
ManagementWithhold prescription-based doses of vitamin D and its derivatives during paricalcitol treatment
FDA PI
MajorDigitalis Glycosides (digoxin)
MechanismParicalcitol-induced hypercalcemia potentiates digitalis toxicity
EffectCardiac arrhythmias
ManagementUse caution; monitor serum calcium and for signs of digitalis toxicity; increase monitoring frequency when adjusting paricalcitol dose
FDA PI
ModerateCholestyramine / Mineral Oil
MechanismImpair intestinal absorption of fat-soluble vitamins including paricalcitol
EffectReduced paricalcitol oral bioavailability
ManagementTake paricalcitol at least 1 hour before or 4–6 hours after cholestyramine or mineral oil
FDA PI
ModerateThiazide Diuretics / High-Dose Calcium Supplements
MechanismThiazides reduce renal calcium excretion; calcium supplements add to calcium load
EffectIncreased risk of hypercalcemia
ManagementMonitor serum calcium more frequently; adjust paricalcitol or calcium supplement dosing as needed
FDA PI
MinorOmeprazole
MechanismCYP2C19 inhibition by omeprazole; paricalcitol is not a CYP2C19 substrate
EffectNo effect on paricalcitol PK when omeprazole 40 mg given 2 h prior
ManagementNo dose adjustment required
FDA PI — DDI Study
Mon

Monitoring

  • Serum CalciumAt least q2wk × 3 months, then monthly × 3 months, then q3 months
    Routine
    Reduce or withhold paricalcitol if hypercalcemia develops. In CKD Stage 5 patients, baseline Ca must be ≤9.5 mg/dL before initiating oral therapy.
  • Serum PhosphorusParallel to calcium monitoring schedule
    Routine
    Paricalcitol may increase phosphorus absorption. Use phosphate binders as needed; avoid aluminum-containing compounds chronically (aluminum toxicity risk).
  • iPTHAt least q2wk × 3 months, then monthly × 3 months, then q3 months (predialysis); q2–4 wk during titration (IV)
    Routine
    Drives dose titration. Maintain within recommended KDIGO target range. If iPTH is chronically below target, reduce or stop paricalcitol to avoid adynamic bone disease.
  • Serum Creatinine / eGFRPeriodically in predialysis patients
    Routine
    Paricalcitol may increase serum creatinine and decrease eGFR (also seen with calcitriol). This does not necessarily indicate true renal function decline.
  • Hypercalcemia SymptomsEach visit
    Trigger-based
    Fatigue, difficulty thinking, appetite loss, nausea, vomiting, constipation, increased thirst, increased urination, weight loss.
  • CYP3A Inhibitor StatusAt each medication reconciliation
    Trigger-based
    Initiation or discontinuation of strong CYP3A inhibitors requires more frequent Ca and iPTH monitoring and potential paricalcitol dose adjustment.
CI

Contraindications & Cautions

Absolute Contraindications

  • Evidence of hypercalcemia — paricalcitol will worsen calcium elevation (FDA PI).
  • Evidence of vitamin D toxicity — paricalcitol adds to existing vitamin D burden.

Relative Contraindications (Specialist Input Recommended)

  • Concurrent pharmacologic vitamin D therapy — additive risk of hypercalcemia, hypercalciuria, hyperphosphatemia.
  • Patients on digitalis — hypercalcemia potentiates arrhythmia risk.
  • CKD Stage 5 with baseline Ca >9.5 mg/dL (oral route) — per FDA PI, reduce baseline Ca to ≤9.5 before initiating oral paricalcitol.

Use with Caution

  • Concurrent strong CYP3A inhibitors — approximately double paricalcitol AUC.
  • Chronic use of aluminum-containing compounds — risk of aluminum overload and bone toxicity (FDA PI Sec 5.4).
  • Severe hepatic impairment — paricalcitol PK not studied in this population.
  • Concomitant thiazides or high-dose calcium supplements — additive hypercalcemia risk.
FDA Safety Warning Hypercalcemia and Vitamin D Intoxication

Progressive hypercalcemia due to overdosage of vitamin D and its metabolites may be so severe as to require emergency attention. Acute hypercalcemia may exacerbate tendencies for cardiac arrhythmias and seizures and may potentiate the action of digitalis. Chronic hypercalcemia can lead to generalized vascular calcification and other soft-tissue calcification. Prescription-based doses of vitamin D and its derivatives should be withheld during paricalcitol treatment to avoid hypercalcemia.

Pt

Patient Counselling

Purpose of Therapy

Paricalcitol is a form of activated vitamin D that helps control overactive parathyroid glands in people with chronic kidney disease. By lowering parathyroid hormone levels, it protects bones and blood vessels from the damage caused by mineral imbalances.

How to Take

Paricalcitol capsules can be taken with or without food. If your doctor has prescribed it three times a week, take it every other day (for example, Monday, Wednesday, Friday) — never two days in a row. If you receive the intravenous form, it will be given during your dialysis session by your healthcare team.

High Calcium (Hypercalcemia)
Tell patientThe most important side effect to watch for is too much calcium in your blood. Early signs include feeling unusually tired, loss of appetite, nausea, constipation, increased thirst, needing to urinate more often, or difficulty thinking clearly. These symptoms should improve quickly once the dose is adjusted.
Call prescriberContact your doctor immediately if you develop persistent nausea, vomiting, confusion, or irregular heartbeat. These may indicate dangerously high calcium requiring prompt attention.
Blood Tests
Tell patientYou will need regular blood tests to check calcium, phosphorus, and parathyroid hormone levels. These are especially frequent when starting the medication or changing the dose (every 2 weeks initially), then become less frequent once your levels are stable.
Call prescriberIf you cannot attend scheduled blood draws, contact your care team to reschedule promptly — unmonitored calcium levels can be dangerous.
Other Supplements & Medications
Tell patientDo not take any vitamin D supplements, including multivitamins containing vitamin D, without your doctor’s approval. Tell your doctor about all medications, including antacids, as some aluminum-containing products should be avoided during treatment.
Call prescriberIf you start any new prescription or over-the-counter medication, particularly antifungal medications (like ketoconazole) or antibiotics (like clarithromycin), as these may require a dose adjustment of paricalcitol.
GI Side Effects
Tell patientSome patients experience diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. These are usually mild and improve with continued use. Staying well hydrated is important, especially if you are on dialysis.
Call prescriberIf GI symptoms are severe, persistent, or if you develop signs of dehydration such as dizziness, dark urine, or rapid heartbeat.
Ref

Sources

Regulatory (PI / SmPC)
  1. Zemplar (paricalcitol) Capsules — Full Prescribing Information. AbbVie Inc. Revised 08/2024. Drugs.comPrimary source for oral paricalcitol dosing, indications, adverse reactions, PK, and drug interactions across CKD Stages 3–5.
  2. Zemplar (paricalcitol) Injection — Full Prescribing Information. AbbVie Inc. DailyMedSource for IV paricalcitol dosing, PK parameters (t½ 13.9–15.4 h in HD/PD patients), and IV-specific safety data.
  3. Paricalcitol Injection — Full Prescribing Information. Accord Healthcare. FDAGeneric IV label confirming identical dosing, PK, and safety profile.
Key Clinical Trials
  1. Martin KJ, González EA, Gellens M, Brendt WJ, Lobaugh B, Lindberg JS. 19-Nor-1-alpha-25-dihydroxyvitamin D2 (paricalcitol) safely and effectively reduces the levels of intact parathyroid hormone in patients on hemodialysis. J Am Soc Nephrol. 1998;9(8):1427–1432. doi:10.1681/ASN.V981427Original phase 3 study demonstrating paricalcitol safety and efficacy with a 30% iPTH reduction within 6 weeks.
  2. Coyne D, Acharya M, Qiu P, et al. Paricalcitol capsule for the treatment of secondary hyperparathyroidism in stages 3 and 4 CKD. Am J Kidney Dis. 2006;47(2):263–276. doi:10.1053/j.ajkd.2005.10.007Pivotal placebo-controlled trial of oral paricalcitol in predialysis CKD patients; source of Table 3 adverse reaction data.
  3. Ross EA, Tian J, Abboud H, et al. Oral paricalcitol for the treatment of secondary hyperparathyroidism in patients on hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis. Am J Nephrol. 2008;28(1):97–106. doi:10.1159/000109398CKD Stage 5 oral paricalcitol study with iPTH/80 dosing formula; source of Table 5 adverse reaction data.
Guidelines
  1. KDIGO 2017 Clinical Practice Guideline Update for the Diagnosis, Evaluation, Prevention, and Treatment of CKD-MBD. Kidney Int Suppl. 2017;7(1):1–59. doi:10.1016/j.kisu.2017.04.001International guideline recommending calcitriol, vitamin D analogs, or calcimimetics for CKD G5D patients requiring PTH-lowering therapy (Rec 4.2.4, 2B).
  2. Ketteler M, et al. Chronic kidney disease–mineral and bone disorder: conclusions from a KDIGO Controversies Conference. Kidney Int. 2025;107(3):405–423. doi:10.1016/j.kint.2024.11.013Most recent KDIGO CKD-MBD update discussing updated role of VDRAs in contemporary management of secondary HPT.
Mechanistic / Basic Science
  1. Slatopolsky E, Finch J, Ritter C, et al. A new analog of calcitriol, 19-nor-1,25-(OH)2D2, suppresses parathyroid hormone secretion in uremic rats in the absence of hypercalcemia. Am J Kidney Dis. 1995;26(5):852–860. doi:10.1016/0272-6386(95)90456-5Foundational preclinical study establishing the selective VDR activation profile of paricalcitol with less calcemic activity than calcitriol.
  2. Brown AJ, Finch J, Slatopolsky E. Differential effects of 19-nor-1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D(2) and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D(3) on intestinal calcium and phosphate transport. J Lab Clin Med. 2002;139(5):279–284. doi:10.1067/mlc.2002.122819Mechanistic study demonstrating that the 19-nor modification reduces intestinal calcium and phosphorus absorption relative to calcitriol.
Pharmacokinetics / Special Populations
  1. Abboud H, Coyne D, Engelman C, et al. Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of paricalcitol capsules in CKD Stage 3 and 4 patients. Ren Fail. 2006;28(5):399–406. doi:10.1080/08860220600683698PK study establishing half-life (17–20 h), bioavailability, and dose-proportionality of oral paricalcitol in CKD patients.
  2. Paricalcitol monograph. In: AHFS Drug Information. American Society of Health-System Pharmacists. Drugs.comComprehensive AHFS monograph summarizing PK across special populations, including HD, PD, and hepatic impairment data.