| Literature DB >> 29926516 |
Hideyuki Mukai1, Hilda Villafuerte1, Abdul Rashid Qureshi1, Bengt Lindholm1, Peter Stenvinkel1.
Abstract
Low serum albumin (S-Alb) is a frequent feature of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) that independently predicts mortality. Serum albumin has mainly been considered a biomarker of visceral protein and immunocompetence status, fundamental to nutritional assessment. However, low S-albumin level is associated with persistent systemic inflammation and many bodies of evidence show that S-Alb has a limited role as a marker of nutritional status. We reported that a low S-Alb concentration was an independent risk factor for poor outcome in ESRD only in the presence of systemic inflammation. Moreover, the relationships between inflammatory biomarkers and outcome are confounded also by alterations in body composition (such as obese sarcopenia) and oxidative stress. Taken together, S-Alb alone should not be used as a proxy of the nutritional status in a dialysis patient. Its association with dietary intake is poor and low S-Alb values are most often non-nutritional in origin. When analyzing S-Alb to predict mortality risk in ESRD, it should always be combined with measurement of hsCRP.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29926516 DOI: 10.1111/sdi.12731
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Semin Dial ISSN: 0894-0959 Impact factor: 3.455