| Literature DB >> 29552348 |
Giorgina B Piccoli1,2, Mona Alrukhaimi3, Zhi-Hong Liu4, Elena Zakharova5,6,7, Adeera Levin8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic kidney disease affects approximately 10% of the world's adult population: It is within the top 20 causes of death worldwide, and its impact on patients and their families can be devastating. World Kidney Day and International Women's Day in 2018 coincide, thus giving an occasion to reflect on open questions on the importance of kidney health in women for the present and the future generations.Entities:
Keywords: access to care; acute and chronic kidney disease; inequities; kidney health; women
Year: 2018 PMID: 29552348 PMCID: PMC5846917 DOI: 10.1177/2054358118761656
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can J Kidney Health Dis ISSN: 2054-3581
Figure 1.Sex differences throughout the continuum of CKD care.
Note. CKD = chronic kidney disease; SLE = systemic lupus erythematosus; RA = rheumatoid arthritis; SS = systemic scleroderma; AKI = acute kidney injury; AI = autoimmune; AVF = arteriovenous fistula; HD = hemodialysis; KT = kidney transplant.
Figure 2.Pregnancy and kidney function: complex interactions between 2 organs, the kidney and placenta.
Note. PE = preeclampsia; AKI = acute kidney injury; CKD = chronic kidney disease.
Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes in Patients With Chronic Kidney Disease and in Their Offspring.
| Term | Definition | Main issues |
|---|---|---|
| Maternal death | Death in pregnancy or within 1 week to 1 month postpartum | Too rare to be quantified, at least in highly resourced settings, where cases are in the setting of severe flares of immunologic diseases (SLE in primis). Still an issue in AKI; and in lowly resourced countries; not quantified in lowly resourced countries, where it merges with dialysis need. |
| CKD progression | Decrease in GFR, rise in sCr, shift to a higher CKD stage | Differently assessed and estimated; may be linked to obstetric policy (anticipating delivery in the case of worsening of the kidney function); between 20% and 80% in advanced CKD. Probably not increased in early CKD stages. |
| Immunologic flares and neonatal SLE | Flares of immunologic diseases in pregnancy | Once thought to be increased in pregnancy, in particular in SLE, are probably a risk in patients who start pregnancy with an active disease, or with a recent flare-up. Definition of a “safe” zone is not uniformly agreed; in quiescent, well controlled diseases do not appear to be increased with respect to nonpregnant, carefully matched controls. |
| Transplant rejection | Acute rejection in pregnancy | Similar to SLE, rejection episodes are not increased with respect to matched controls; may be an issue in unplanned pregnancies, in unstable patients. |
| Abortion | Fetal loss, before 21 to 24 gestational weeks | May be increased in CKD, but data are scant. An issue in immunologic diseases (eventually, but not exclusively linked to the presence of LLAC) and in diabetic nephropathy. |
| Stillbirth | Delivery of a nonviable infant, after 21 to 24 gestational weeks | Probably not increased in early CKD, may be an issue in dialysis patients; when not linked to extreme prematurity, may specifically linked to SLE, immunologic diseases, and diabetic nephropathy. |
| Perinatal death | Death within 1 week to 1 month form delivery | Usually a result of extreme prematurity, which bears a risk of respiratory distress, neonatal sepsis, cerebral hemorrhage. |
| Small, very small baby | A baby weighing <2500 to 1500 g at birth | Has to be analyzed with respect to gestational age. |
| Preterm, early extremely preterm | Delivery before 37 to 34 or 28 completed gestational weeks | Increase in risk of preterm and early preterm delivery across CKD stages; extremely preterm may be an important issue in undiagnosed or late referred CKD and PE-AKI. |
| SGA (IUGR) | <5th or <10th centile for gestational age | Strictly and inversely related to preterm delivery; SGA and IUGR are probably related to risk for hypertension, metabolic syndrome, and CKD in adulthood. |
| Malformations | Any kind of malformations | Malformations are not increased in CKD patients not treated by teratogen drugs (MMF, mTOR inhibitors, ACEi, ARBS); exception: diabetic nephropathy (attributed to diabetes); hereditary diseases, such as PKD, reflux nephropathy, CAKUT may be evident at birth. |
| Hereditary kidney diseases | Any kind of CKD | Several forms of CKD recognize a hereditary pattern or predisposition; besides PKD, reflux, and CAKUT, Alport’s disease, IgA, kidney tubular disorders, and mitochondrial diseases have a genetic background, usually evident in adulthood and not always clearly elucidated. |
| CKD-hypertension | Higher risk of hypertension and CKD in adulthood | Late maturation of nephrons results in a lower nephron number in preterm babies; the risks are probably higher in SGA-IUGR babies than in preterm babies adequate for gestational age. |
| Other long-term issues | Developmental disorders | Mainly due to prematurity, cerebral hemorrhage, or neonatal sepsis, are not specific of CKD, but are a threat in all preterm babies. |
Note. SLE = systemic lupus erythematosus; AKI = acute kidney injury; CKD = chronic kidney disease; GFR = glomerular filtration rate; sCR = serum creatinine; LLAC = lupus-like anticoagulant; PE-AKI = preeclampsia acute kidney injury; SGA = small for gestational age; IUGR = intrauterine growth restriction; MMF = mycophenolate mofetil; mTOR = mechanistic target of rapamycin; ACEi = angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor; ARBS = angiotensin II receptor blockers; PKD = polycystic kidney disease; CAKUT = congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract; IgA = immunoglobulin A.
Sex Differences in the Incidence and Severity of Autoimmune Diseases.
| SLE | RA | SS | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Peak incidence | Reproductive age | Perimenopausal | After 50 to 60 years | |
| Female/male ratio | Peak 15:1 | Peak 4:1 | Peak 14:1 | |
| Total 9:1 | After 60 years 1:1 | Total 3:1 | ||
| Influence of estrogen | High levels | Negative | Positive | Unknown |
| Low levels | Unknown | Negative | Negative | |
Note. SLE = systemic lupus erythematosus; RA = rheumatoid arthritis; SS = systemic scleroderma.