| Literature DB >> 28273171 |
William G Herrington1,2, Margaret Smith3, Clare Bankhead3, Kunihiro Matsushita4, Sarah Stevens3, Tim Holt3, F D Richard Hobbs3, Josef Coresh4, Mark Woodward4,5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is uncertain whether being overweight, but not obese, is associated with advanced chronic kidney disease (CKD) and how the size and shape of associations between body-mass index (BMI) and advanced CKD differs among different types of people.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28273171 PMCID: PMC5342319 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0173515
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Baseline characteristics and follow-up time of the cohort overall and by category of body-mass index.
| Baseline body-mass index (kg/m2) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ≥15,<20 | ≥20,<25 | ≥25,<30 | ≥30,<35 | ≥35,<60 | All | |
| 74,875 | 449,766 | 505,493 | 245,729 | 129,153 | ||
| 18.7 (1.0) | 22.8 (1.4) | 27.3 (1.4) | 32.1 (1.4) | 39.4 (4.2) | ||
| Mean baseline age, years | 41.4 (17.2) | 46.5 (16.4) | 51.0 (15.2) | 50.6 (14.6) | 47.7 (14.2) | |
| Female sex | 57,540 (77%) | 295,285 (66%) | 250,390 (49%) | 129,644 (53%) | 84,861 (66%) | |
| Cigarette smoking | ||||||
| Current | 20,139 (27%) | 95,725 (21%) | 88,434 (17%) | 38,625 (16%) | 18,234 (14%) | |
| Former | 8842 (11%) | 77,716 (17%) | 113,312 (22%) | 55,315 (23%) | 23,804 (18%) | |
| Never | 21,912 (29%) | 156,821 (35%) | 164,821 (33%) | 71,236 (29%) | 33,740 (26%) | |
| Missing | 24,382 (33%) | 119,504 (27%) | 138,926 (27%) | 80,553 (33%) | 53,375 (41%) | |
| Higher than average social deprivation | 33,771 (45%) | 179,039 (40%) | 208,343 (41%) | 112,979 (46%) | 67,305 (52%) | |
| Diabetes mellitus | 1746 (2.3%) | 17,945 (4.0%) | 37,598 (7.4%) | 26,643 (11%) | 18,453 (14%) | |
| Uncontrolled hypertension | 9978 (17%) | 99,430 (26%) | 175,881 (40%) | 101,703 (49%) | 55,021 (53%) | |
| Prior cardiovascular disease | 4187 (5.6%) | 33,881 (7.5%) | 58,026 (11%) | 30,038 (12%) | 13,475 (10%) | |
| CKD stage 4 or 5 | 292 (0.4%) | 1,901 (0.4%) | 2,800 (0.6%) | 1,546 (0.6%) | 904 (0.7%) | 7,443 (0.5%) |
| End-stage renal disease | 136 (0.2%) | 720 (0.2%) | 790 (0.2%) | 410 (0.2%) | 205 (0.2%) | 2,261 (0.2%) |
| 7.0 (4.8–9.7) | 7.4 (5.1–10.1) | 7.6 (5.3–10.2) | 7.6 (5.3–10.3) | 7.7 (5.2–10.4) | ||
| 4,814 (6.4%) | 21,697 (4.8%) | 28,602 (5.7%) | 14,539 (5.9%) | 7,533 (5.8%) | ||
CKD = Chronic kidney disease. Data are number (%) or mean (standard deviation) or median (interquartile cutoffs).
* Patients with these outcomes were excluded from the main analyses for that outcome.
Association between body-mass index and the risk of advanced chronic kidney disease by different levels of adjustment.
| Crude model | Adjusted for age and sex | Adjusted for confounders | Adjusted for other mediators of risk | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline BMI (kg/m2) | Number of outcomes | HR | (95% CI) | HR | (95% CI) | HR | (95% CI) | HR | (95% CI) |
| 0.72 | (0.64–0.81) | 0.95 | (0.84–1.07) | 0.98 | (0.86–1.12) | ||||
| 1.00 | (0.96–1.04) | 1.00 | (0.96–1.04) | 1.00 | (0.96–1.04) | ||||
| 1.68 | (1.63–1.73) | 1.34 | (1.30–1.38) | 1.20 | (1.16–1.23) | ||||
| 2.15 | (2.07–2.23) | 1.97 | (1.89–2.04) | 1.54 | (1.48–1.60) | ||||
| 2.43 | (2.32–2.55) | 3.18 | (3.03–3.34) | 2.19 | (2.08–2.31) | ||||
| 1.02 | (0.79–1.32) | 1.35 | (1.05–1.74) | 1.33 | (0.99–1.78) | ||||
| 1.00 | (0.90–1.11) | 1.00 | (0.90–1.11) | 1.00 | (0.90–1.11) | ||||
| 1.45 | (1.35–1.57) | 1.14 | (1.06–1.24) | 1.00 | (0.93–1.09) | ||||
| 1.66 | (1.50–1.84) | 1.39 | (1.26–1.55) | 1.02 | (0.92–1.14) | ||||
| 2.20 | (1.94–2.49) | 2.32 | (2.05–2.63) | 1.44 | (1.26–1.64) | ||||
BMI = Body-mass index. HR = hazard ratio. CI = confidence interval.
* Excludes outcomes occurring at baseline or within the first 3 years of follow-up. Confounders included: baseline age (continuous), sex, current smoking and fifths of social deprivation; pre-existing other mediators of risk included: diabetes, uncontrolled hypertension and prior cardiovascular disease at baseline. CIs were estimated using the method of floating absolute risk that allows appropriate statistical comparisons to be made between any two groups.
Fig 1Association between baseline body-mass index and risk of advanced chronic kidney disease by sex, age and smoking status at baseline.
BMI = body-mass index. CKD4-5 = CKD stage 4 or 5. ESRD = end-stage renal disease. CI = confidence interval. Analyses excluded those with outcomes at baseline or during the first 3 years of follow-up. Hazard ratios were all adjusted or stratified by age (continuous), sex, current smoking and level of deprivation (by fifths) and are plotted against the mean BMI in each BMI category. Boxes are plotted so that the area is proportional to the inverse variance of the floated hazard ratio. Error bars indicate 95% CIs and are accompanied by the hazard ratio (upper number) and number of outcomes (lower number).
Fig 2Association between baseline body-mass index and risk of advanced chronic kidney disease by diabetes, prior cardiovascular disease and uncontrolled hypertension at baseline.
BMI = body-mass index. CKD4-5 = CKD stage 4 or 5. ESRD = end-stage renal disease. CVD = cardiovascular disease. SBP = systolic blood pressure. CI = confidence interval. Analyses excluded those with outcomes at baseline or during the first 3 years of follow−up. SBP analyses exclude 218,466 participants with a missing measurement. Hazard ratios were all adjusted or stratified by age (continuous), sex, current smoking and level of deprivation (by fifths) and are plotted against the mean BMI in each BMI category. Boxes are plotted so that the area is proportional to the inverse variance of the floated hazard ratio. Error bars indicate 95% CIs and are accompanied by the hazard ratio (upper number) and number of outcomes (lower number).
Percentage of advanced chronic kidney disease attributable to being overweight or obese at ages 40–79 in English primary care 2000–2014.
| Number of cases | Prevalence of BMI ≥25kg/m2 among cases | Hazard ratio (95% CI): BMI ≥25 vs. <25kg/m2 | Population attributable fraction (95% CI) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Men | 5495 | 78% | 1.50 | (1.41–1.60) | 26% | (22–30%) |
| Women | 5717 | 79% | 2.00 | (1.88–2.13) | 39% | (36–42%) |
| Men | 939 | 78% | 1.28 | (1.10–1.50) | 17% | (7–26%) |
| Women | 566 | 75% | 1.52 | (1.25–1.84) | 25% | (14–35%) |
BMI = body-mass index. CI = confidence interval. In this cohort, prevalence of overweight, obesity and very severe obesity in men and women were similar to levels observed in the recent representative Health Survey for England,[2,21] and the age structure between 40–79 years closely mirrored recent national Census data.[35] The population attributable fraction was calculated using the Stata punafcc function after Cox regression and adjustment for confounders (i.e., age, cigarette smoking and level of social deprivation).