Literature DB >> 27282755

Primacy of lowered baseline glomerular filtration rate as a risk for incident chronic kidney disease: A longitudinal study in Japanese subjects.

Takahiro Miyakoshi1, Yasuto Nakasone1, Yuka Sato1, Keishi Yamauchi1, Rie Hashikura2, Masayuki Takayama3, Kazuko Hirabayashi2, Hideo Koike2, Tatsumi Moriya4, Toru Aizawa1.   

Abstract

AIM: Risk profile for incident chronic kidney disease (CKD) in Japanese subjects has not been established. Our aim was to identify risk factors for CKD in Japanese.
METHODS: Consecutive 171 536 health examinees (median age 49 years and estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) 78.2 mL/min per 1.73 m2 ) without CKD were re-examined after a median period of 6.2 years. Results of Cox proportional hazards models in randomly assigned two thirds (Derivation cohort) were verified in the rest (Validation cohort). CKD was defined as eGFR <60 mL/min per 1.73 m2 or positive dipstick proteinuria.
RESULTS: In the Derivation cohort, CKD developed in 1002 (5.8%) subjects. Seven variables such as lower eGFR, male gender, higher uric acid concentration, lower red cell count and higher age and systolic blood pressure were identified as significant risks for CKD, with lowered eGFR being an overwhelmingly strong risk: adjusted hazard ratio for those with the baseline eGFR <70 mL/min per 1.73 m2 was as high as 90.1. Performance of prediction of CKD by the probability on the basis of the seven risk factors combined was only marginally preferable to eGFR alone. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (95% CI) for the prediction was 0.846 (0.826-0.864) and 0.822 (0.802-0.840) (P < 0.01), the kappa statistic was 0.263 and 0.250 (n.s.), and the mean absolute difference between "predicted probability" and "observed" CKD was 1.4% and 1.9% (P = 0.14) by the combined model and eGFR alone, respectively.
CONCLUSION: Seven risk factors for incident CKD were identified in Japanese health examinees. However, lowered baseline eGFR outweighed other risks to the degree that eGFR alone was suffice for CKD prediction.
© 2016 Asian Pacific Society of Nephrology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Japanese; chronic kidney disease; epidemiology; estimated glomerular filtration rate; risk factor

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 27282755     DOI: 10.1111/nep.12836

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nephrology (Carlton)        ISSN: 1320-5358            Impact factor:   2.506


  1 in total

1.  Serum γ-glutamyltransferase and subsequent chronic kidney disease in a prospective study.

Authors:  Tomoyuki Kawada
Journal:  Int Urol Nephrol       Date:  2017-08-19       Impact factor: 2.370

  1 in total

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