Albuminuria, Proteinuria, and Renal Disease Progression in Children with CKD

被引:57
|
作者
Fuhrman, Dana Y.
Schneider, Michael F.
Dell, Katherine M.
Blydt-Hansen, Tom D.
Mak, Robert
Saland, Jeffrey M.
Furth, Susan L.
Warady, Bradley A.
Moxey-Mims, Marva M.
Schwartz, George J.
机构
来源
CLINICAL JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEPHROLOGY | 2017年 / 12卷 / 06期
关键词
CHRONIC KIDNEY-DISEASE; GLOMERULAR-FILTRATION-RATE; COLLABORATIVE METAANALYSIS; HIGH-RISK; CARDIOVASCULAR EVENTS; URINARY ALBUMIN; EXCRETION RATE; ALL-CAUSE; MICROALBUMINURIA; PREDICTORS;
D O I
10.2215/CJN.11971116
中图分类号
R5 [内科学]; R69 [泌尿科学(泌尿生殖系疾病)];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background and objectives The role of albuminuria as an indicator of progression has not been investigated in children with CKD in the absence of diabetes. Design, setting, participants, & measurements Children were enrolled from 49 centers of the CKD in Children study between January of 2005 and March of 2014. Cross-sectional multivariable linear regression (n=647) was used to examine the relationship between urine protein-to-creatinine (UP/C [milligrams per milligram]) and albumin-to-creatinine (ACR [milligrams per gram]) with eGFR (milliliters per minute per 1.73 m(2)). Parametric time-to-event analysis (n=751) was used to assess the association of UP/C, ACR, and urine nonalbumin-tocreatinine (Unon-alb/cr [milligrams per gram]) on the time to the composite endpoint of initiation of RRT or 50% decline in eGFR. Results The median follow-up time was 3.4 years and 202 individuals experienced the event. Participants with a UP/C >= 0.2 mg/mg and ACR >= 30 mg/g had a mean eGFR that was 16 ml/min per 1.73 m2 lower than those with a UP/C<0.2 mg/mg and ACR<30 mg/g. Individuals with ACR<30 mg/g, but a UP/C >= 0.2 mg/mg, had a mean eGFR that was 9.3 ml/min per 1.73 m2 lower than those with a UP/C<0.2 mg/mg. and ACR<30 mg/g. When categories of ACR and Unon-alb/cr were created on the basis of clinically meaningful cutoff values of UP/C with the same sample sizes for comparison, the relative times (RTs) to the composite end-point were almost identical when comparing the middle (RT=0.31 for UP/C [0.2-2.0 mg/mg], RT=0.38 for ACR [56-1333 mg/g], RT=0.31 for Unon-alb/cr [118-715 mg/g]) and the highest (RT=0.08 for UP/C [>2.0 mg/mg], RT=0.09 for ACR [>1333 mg/g], RT=0.07 for Unon-alb/cr [>715 mg/g]) levels to the lowest levels. A similar trend was seen when categories were created on the basis of clinically meaningful cutoff values of ACR (<30, 30-300, >300 mg/g). Conclusions In children with CKD without diabetes, the utility of an initial UP/C, ACR, and Unon-alb/cr for characterizing progression is similar.
引用
收藏
页码:912 / 920
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] A narrative review of proteinuria and albuminuria as clinical biomarkers in children
    Larkins, Nicholas G.
    Teixeira-Pinto, Armando
    Craig, Jonathan C.
    JOURNAL OF PAEDIATRICS AND CHILD HEALTH, 2019, 55 (02) : 136 - 142
  • [2] Implications of Proteinuria: CKD Progression and Cardiovascular Outcomes
    Sarnak, Mark J.
    Astor, Brad C.
    ADVANCES IN CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE, 2011, 18 (04) : 258 - 266
  • [3] Proteinuria: detection and role in native renal disease progression
    Luis Gorriz, Jose
    Martinez-Castelao, Alberto
    TRANSPLANTATION REVIEWS, 2012, 26 (01) : 3 - 13
  • [4] Prediction of CKD progression and cardiovascular events using albuminuria and pulse wave velocity
    Carlsen, Rasmus Kirkeskov
    Khatir, Dinah Sherzad
    Jensen, Danny
    Birn, Henrik
    Buus, Niels Henrik
    KIDNEY & BLOOD PRESSURE RESEARCH, 2023, 48 (01) : 468 - 475
  • [5] Proteinuria versus albuminuria in chronic kidney disease
    Guh, Jinn-Yuh
    NEPHROLOGY, 2010, 15 : 53 - 56
  • [6] Assessment of Proteinuria in Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease Stage 3: Albuminuria and Non-Albumin Proteinuria
    Fraser, Simon D. S.
    Roderick, Paul J.
    McIntyre, Natasha J.
    Harris, Scott
    McIntyre, Christopher
    Fluck, Richard
    Taal, Maarten W.
    PLOS ONE, 2014, 9 (05):
  • [7] Normal 25-Hydroxyvitamin D Levels Are Associated with Less Proteinuria and Attenuate Renal Failure Progression in Children with CKD
    Shroff, Rukshana
    Aitkenhead, Helen
    Costa, Nikola
    Trivelli, Antonella
    Litwin, Mieczyslaw
    Picca, Stefano
    Anarat, Ali
    Sallay, Peter
    Ozaltin, Fatih
    Zurowska, Aleksandra
    Jankauskiene, Augustina
    Montini, Giovanni
    Charbit, Marina
    Schaefer, Franz
    Wuehl, Elke
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEPHROLOGY, 2016, 27 (01): : 314 - 322
  • [8] Risk of cardiovascular disease, death, and renal progression in diabetes according to albuminuria and estimated glomerular filtration rate
    Niu, Jingya
    Zhang, Xiaoyun
    Li, Mian
    Wu, Shujing
    Zheng, Ruizhi
    Chen, Li
    Huo, Yanan
    Xu, Min
    Wang, Tiange
    Zhao, Zhiyun
    Wang, Shuangyuan
    Lin, Hong
    Qin, Guijun
    Yan, Li
    Wan, Qin
    Chen, Lulu
    Shi, Lixin
    Hu, Ruying
    Tang, Xulei
    Su, Qing
    Yu, Xuefeng
    Qin, Yingfen
    Chen, Gang
    Gao, Zhengnan
    Wang, Guixia
    Shen, Feixia
    Luo, Zuojie
    Chen, Yuhong
    Zhang, Yinfei
    Liu, Chao
    Wang, Youmin
    Wu, Shengli
    Yang, Tao
    Li, Qiang
    Mu, Yiming
    Zhao, Jiajun
    Bi, Yufang
    Ning, Guang
    Wang, Weiqing
    Lu, Jieli
    Xu, Yu
    DIABETES & METABOLISM, 2023, 49 (02)
  • [9] Proteinuria as a risk factor for the progression of chronic renal disease
    Petrovic, Dejan
    Stojimirovic, Biljana
    VOJNOSANITETSKI PREGLED, 2008, 65 (07) : 552 - 558
  • [10] Early Proteinuria Lowering by Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibition Predicts Renal Survival in Children with CKD
    van den Belt, Sophie M.
    Heerspink, Hiddo J. L.
    Gracchi, Valentina
    de Zeeuw, Dick
    Wuehl, Elke
    Schaefer, Franz
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEPHROLOGY, 2018, 29 (08): : 2225 - 2233