Literature DB >> 32050924

Serum magnesium, mortality and disease progression in chronic kidney disease.

Rami Azem1, Remy Daou2, Elias Bassil3, Eva Maria Anvari1,4, Jonathan J Taliercio1,4, Susana Arrigain5, Jesse D Schold5, Tushar Vachharajani1,4, Joseph Nally1,4, Georges N Na Khoul6,7.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Magnesium disorders are commonly encountered in chronic kidney disease (CKD) and are typically a consequence of decreased kidney function or frequently prescribed medications such as diuretics and proton pump inhibitors. While hypomagnesemia has been linked with increased mortality, the association between elevated magnesium levels and mortality is not clearly defined. Additionally, associations between magnesium disorders, type of death, and CKD progression have not been reported. Therefore, we studied the associations between magnesium levels, CKD progression, mortality, and cause specific deaths in patients with CKD.
METHODS: Using the Cleveland Clinic CKD registry, we identified 10,568 patients with estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate (eGFR) between 15 and 59 ml/min/1.73 m2 in this range for a minimum of 3 months with a measured magnesium level. We categorized subjects into 3 groups based on these magnesium levels (≤ 1.7, 1.7-2.6 and > 2.6 mg/dl) and applied cox regression modeling and competing risk models to identify associations with overall and cause-specific mortality. We also evaluated the association between magnesium level and slope of eGFR using mixed models.
RESULTS: During a median follow-up of 3.7 years, 4656 (44%) patients died. After adjusting for relevant covariates, a magnesium level < 1.7 mg/dl (vs. 1.7-2.6 mg/dl) was associated with higher overall mortality (HR = 1.14, 95% CI: 1.04, 1.24), and with higher sub-distribution hazards for non-cardiovascular non-malignancy mortality (HR = 1.29, 95% CI: 1.12, 1.49). Magnesium levels > 2.6 mg/dl (vs. 1.7-2.6 mg/dl) was associated with a higher risk of all-cause death only (HR = 1.23, 95% CI: 1.03, 1.48). We found similar results when evaluating magnesium as a continuous measure. There were no significant differences in the slope of eGFR across all three magnesium groups (p = 0.10).
CONCLUSIONS: In patients with CKD stage 3 and 4, hypomagnesemia was associated with higher all-cause and non-cardiovascular non-malignancy mortality. Hypermagnesemia was associated with higher all-cause mortality. Neither hypo nor hypermagnesemia were associated with an increased risk of CKD progression.

Entities:  

Keywords:  CKD; Disease progression; Magnesium; Mortality

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32050924      PMCID: PMC7017617          DOI: 10.1186/s12882-020-1713-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMC Nephrol        ISSN: 1471-2369            Impact factor:   2.388


Introduction

Magnesium is the second most abundant intracellular electrolyte and plays a significant role in essentially every biologic function within the cell [1]. It is important for bone and mineral metabolism, as well as for regulating vascular tone and heart rhythm [2, 3]. Magnesium does not appear to be controlled by any hormonal systems. Rather, the regulation of magnesium balance is dependent on intestinal absorption and renal excretion. Given the essential role of the kidneys in maintaining magnesium homeostasis, abnormalities in magnesium levels, including hypomagnesemia and hypermagnesemia, are not uncommon in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Hypomagnesemia in CKD is usually the result of medication use [4] such as diuretics, calcineurin inhibitors or proton pump inhibitors [5] but it can also be caused by associated conditions like diabetes or volume expansion [6]. Hypomagnesemia has been investigated in non-CKD, CKD, and end stage renal disease (ESRD) patient populations and has been found to be associated with increased mortality [1, 7, 8], notably increased cardiovascular mortality [9]. Hypomagnesemia has also been linked to a worsening rate of decline in eGFR, though this has not been clearly established [7, 10]. Hypermagnesemia in CKD is the result of decreased Glomerular Filtration Rate (GFR). Since urinary excretion is the primary magnesium regulatory system, plasma magnesium levels rise as renal function decreases [11]. The relationship between hypermagnesemia and mortality is not as clear. Some studies suggest that mild elevations in serum magnesium levels are associated with a survival advantage [7, 12–14]. There are no studies examining the associations between hypermagnesemia and CKD progression. Our study examines the association between serum magnesium levels, all-cause mortality and progression of CKD in a large cohort of CKD patients.

Materials and methods

Patient population

We used the Cleveland Clinic CKD registry to evaluate the relationship between serum magnesium and outcomes. The CKD registry was developed from the electronic health records (EHR) and we have described the development and validation in detail in previously published work [15]. For this analysis, we included patients fulfilling the following criteria: a) had at least one in-person outpatient encounter with a Cleveland Clinic health care provider and at least two estimated glomerular fitration rate (eGFR) results < 60 ml/min/1.73 m2 taken more than 90 days apart from 2005 to 2014. (the second eGFR was 15–59.9 ml/min/1.73 m2 and patients were not on dialysis nor had a prior kidney transplant), b) had serum magnesium measured within the year prior to the date of second eGFR< 60 (CKD); and c) were residents of Ohio.

Patient characteristics

We extracted demographic information including sex, age, race, and insurance from the EHR. We used previously specified and validated criteria to define comorbidities including hypertension, diabetes mellitus, coronary artery disease, congestive heart failure, hyperlipidemia, and malignancy [15]. Baseline conditions were ascertained prior to the second eGFR < 60 ml/min/1.73 m2. We also obtained laboratory measurements (serum hemoglobin, albumin, bicarbonate and potassium) from the EHR. For laboratory results other than serum magnesium, we used the last outpatient laboratory result within 2 years prior to second eGFR < 60 ml/min/1.73 m2.

Kidney function

Our hospital measured serum creatinine in a clinical laboratory with a Hitachi D 2400 Modular Chemistry Analyzer (Roche Diagnostics, Indianapolis, IN). We used the CKD-EPI equation [16] to calculate eGFR. We classified CKD into the following stages: CKD stage 3a (eGFR 45–59 ml/min/1.73 m2), stage 3b (eGFR 30–44 ml/min/1.73 m2), and stage 4 CKD (eGFR 15–29 ml/min/1.73 m2)..

Serum magnesium

Serum magnesium was measured using the Gen.2 homogeneous enzymatic calorimetric assay on the Cobas C702 analyzer (Roche diagnostics). Serum magnesium was classified based on the normal ranged provided by the assay into the following categories: < 1.7, 1.7–2.6, and > 2.6 mg/dl. Magnesium data obtained within 1 year prior to second eGFR < 60 ml/min/1.73 m2 was included.

Ascertainment of death and its causes

We obtained mortality data from the EHR and through linkage of our registry with the Ohio Department of Health death records. The state death records contain causes of death coded according to the International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision (ICD-10). We grouped the underlying causes of death following the National Center for Health Statistics coding system, except for a modification explained here. We classified deaths into three categories: a) deaths from cardiovascular causes, b) deaths from malignancy, and c) deaths from other (non-cardiovascular and non-malignancy-related) conditions. We defined cardiovascular deaths as those due to diseases of the heart, essential hypertension, cerebrovascular disease, atherosclerosis, or other diseases of the circulatory system (ICD-10 codes I00–I78). Patients with death reported in the EHR but not found in Ohio mortality files were included in analyses of all-cause mortality and excluded from cause-specific analyses.

Statistical analysis

We compared baseline characteristics between patients with and without magnesium data, and also among patients with different magnesium levels using Chi-square and ANOVA and Kruskal-Wallis tests for categorical and continuous variables, respectively. We summarized the leading causes of death for various magnesium categories as percent of total deaths observed. We estimated survival over time by magnesium level using Kaplan-Meier survival estimates. We evaluated the relationship between magnesium levels and overall mortality using a Cox proportional hazards model and the relationship between magnesium level and cause specific death categories using competing risks regression models as described by Fine and Gray. We adjusted the models for the following covariates: sex, age, race, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, hypertension, coronary artery disease, congestive heart failure, cerebrovascular disease, malignancy, body mass index, albumin, hemoglobin, calcium, serum bicarbonate, potassium, magnesium supplement, proton pump inhibitors, insurance group, ACEI (Angiotensin Conversion Enzyme Inhibitors) /ARB (Angiotensin Receptor Blockers), beta blockers, diuretics, smoking and eGFR. We used splines to relax linearity assumptions as necessary. Approximately 5% of patients were missing Body Mass Index (BMI), albumin or hemoglobin data, < 0.1% were missing bicarbonate, potassium or calcium data, 23% were missing smoking status, and 6% did not have insurance data. We used multiple imputation (SAS proc. MI) to impute data in 2 steps. In the first step we used the Markov Chain Monte Carlo method and a single chain to impute 5 datasets with complete continuous and binary data. In the second step we imputed insurance group on each of the 5 datasets using discriminant function analysis15. We included the following covariates in the imputation: sex, age, race, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, hypertension, coronary artery disease, congestive heart failure, cerebrovascular disease, malignancy, body mass index, albumin, hemoglobin, calcium, serum bicarbonate, potassium, magnesium supplement, insurance group, ACEI/ARB, beta blockers, diuretics, smoking and eGFR. We ran all models on each of the 5 imputed datasets, and then combined parameter estimates using SAS MI analyze. We also evaluated the association between continuous magnesium and all-cause mortality using restricted cubic splines at percentiles 10, 50 and 90 in the Cox model. We graphed continuous magnesium vs. the log hazard using data from the first imputation. The graph estimates were calculated for a hypothetical patient with mean values on all baseline covariates. We evaluated two-way interactions on all-cause mortality between magnesium level and each of the following: eGFR, BMI group and potassium level. We conducted a sensitivity analysis to confirm the main mortality findings while excluding patients with history of malignancy. To evaluate the slope of eGFR at different values of baseline magnesium, we used a mixed model analysis with subjects considered a random effect and tested the interaction between magnesium level and time (slope of eGFR over time) until patients reached eGFR< 20 or dialysis initiation or preemptive transplant or end of study or end of follow up. We iteratively tested the covariance structure for mixed models and selected our final model based on best fit as determined by the Akaike Information Criteria. An autoregressive covariance structure was used for the final model. We used the first eGFR per month for each patient. We adjusted for the covariates mentioned above. Wed fit the model on each of the 5 imputed datasets, and parameter estimates were combined using SAS MI analyze. All analyses were conducted using Linux SAS version 9.4 (SAS Institute, Cary, NC), and graphs were created using R 3.5.1 (The R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria). This study and the CKD registry were both approved by the Cleveland Clinic Institutional Review Board (IRB study number 09–015).

Results

From 2005 to December 2014, there were 73,693 patients with CKD stage 3 or 4 in the registry who were residents of Ohio (Figure 3 in Appendix). Of those, 10,568 had magnesium levels within the year prior to entry into the registry and qualified for this study. Patients who had magnesium measured were younger, more male, more African American, had lower BMI, less diabetes, more malignancy, less hypertension, more congestive heart failure, and lower eGFR compared to those that didn’t have magnesium measured (Table 4 in Appendix). The mean age was 68.7 ± 13.3 years, 47% were men, and 14% were blacks. Mean BMI of the study cohort was 29.2 ± 7 kg/m2. Prevalence of diabetes, malignancy, and coronary artery disease were 21, 27 and 20% respectively. Mean eGFR of the study population was 46.3 ml/min/1.73 m2. Table 1 outlines other details of the study population based on magnesium categories.
Table 1

Patient characteristics by baseline Magnesium level

FactorOverall (N = 10,568)< 1.7 mg/dl (N = 1314)1.7–2.6 mg/dl (N = 9049)> 2.6 mg/dl (N = 205)p-value
Age68.7 ± 13.365.4 ± 13.569.1 ± 13.268.7 ± 14.0< 0.001a
Male4969 (47.0)556 (42.3)4309 (47.6)104 (50.7)< 0.001c
African American1445 (13.7)188 (14.3)1222 (13.5)35 (17.1)0.26c
Smoking0.005c
 No7414 (70.2)884 (67.3)6386 (70.6)144 (70.2)
 Yes723 (6.8)122 (9.3)588 (6.5)13 (6.3)
 Missing2431 (23.0)308 (23.4)2075 (22.9)48 (23.4)
BMI29.2 ± 7.029.2 ± 7.129.2 ± 6.928.8 ± 8.00.80a
BMI group0.20c
  < 18.5 kg/m2204 (1.9)33 (2.5)161 (1.8)10 (4.9)
 18.5–24.9 kg/m22719 (25.7)324 (24.7)2343 (25.9)52 (25.4)
 25–29.9 kg/m23291 (31.1)409 (31.1)2823 (31.2)59 (28.8)
 30–34.9 kg/m22097 (19.8)257 (19.6)1801 (19.9)39 (19.0)
 35–39.9 kg/m2969 (9.2)119 (9.1)833 (9.2)17 (8.3)
 40+ kg/m2757 (7.2)101 (7.7)641 (7.1)15 (7.3)
 Missing531 (5.0)71 (5.4)447 (4.9)13 (6.3)
Diabetes2175 (20.6)316 (24.0)1809 (20.0)50 (24.4)0.001c
Malignancy2871 (27.2)428 (32.6)2405 (26.6)38 (18.5)< 0.001c
Hypertension7998 (75.7)1007 (76.6)6835 (75.5)156 (76.1)0.68c
Hyperlipidemia7303 (69.1)849 (64.6)6307 (69.7)147 (71.7)< 0.001c
CAD2117 (20.0)190 (14.5)1875 (20.7)52 (25.4)< 0.001c
CHF1589 (15.0)107 (8.1)1408 (15.6)74 (36.1)< 0.001c
CVD894 (8.5)83 (6.3)796 (8.8)15 (7.3)0.009c
PVD279 (2.6)30 (2.3)244 (2.7)5 (2.4)0.67c
ACEI/ARB6025 (57.0)688 (52.4)5207 (57.5)130 (63.4)< 0.001c
Diuretics6684 (63.2)816 (62.1)5715 (63.2)153 (74.6)0.002c
Statin5138 (48.6)578 (44.0)4456 (49.2)104 (50.7)0.001c
Beta Blocker5963 (56.4)722 (54.9)5113 (56.5)128 (62.4)0.12c
Magnesium supplement2572 (24.3)525 (40.0)2012 (22.2)35 (17.1)< 0.001c
Proton pump inhibitor5236 (49.5)754 (57.4)4390 (48.5)92 (44.9)< 0.001c
eGFR46.3 ± 11.046.7 ± 10.446.3 ± 11.040.0 ± 12.9< 0.001a
CKD stage< 0.001c
 45–596572 (62.2)834 (63.5)5652 (62.5)86 (42.0)
 30–442888 (27.3)367 (27.9)2461 (27.2)60 (29.3)
 15–291108 (10.5)113 (8.6)936 (10.3)59 (28.8)
Albumin3.9 ± 0.593.8 ± 0.623.9 ± 0.593.9 ± 0.61< 0.001a
Hemoglobin12.3 ± 1.911.7 ± 1.912.4 ± 1.911.7 ± 2.2< 0.001a
Potassium4.3 ± 0.594.2 ± 0.644.3 ± 0.584.4 ± 0.64< 0.001a
Calcium9.4 ± 0.689.3 ± 0.769.4 ± 0.669.3 ± 0.86< 0.001a
CO225.8 ± 3.825.0 ± 4.026.0 ± 3.726.3 ± 5.4< 0.001a
Insurance grouped0.035c
 Medicaid241 (2.3)33 (2.5)204 (2.3)4 (2.0)
 Medicare6901 (65.3)821 (62.5)5942 (65.7)138 (67.3)
 Other2835 (26.8)367 (27.9)2422 (26.8)46 (22.4)
 Missing591 (5.6)93 (7.1)481 (5.3)17 (8.3)

Statistics presented as Mean ± SD, or N (column %)

p-values: aANOVA, cPearson’s chi-square test

Number missing data: BMI 531, albumin 544, hemoglobin 529, potassium 6, calcium 5, CO2 6

Patient characteristics by baseline Magnesium level Statistics presented as Mean ± SD, or N (column %) p-values: aANOVA, cPearson’s chi-square test Number missing data: BMI 531, albumin 544, hemoglobin 529, potassium 6, calcium 5, CO2 6

Mortality

During a median follow up of 3.7 years, 4656 (44%) patients died; cause of death was available for 4599 patients. Among them, 1597 (34.7%) died of cardiovascular causes, 1292 (28.1%) due to malignancy, 1623 (35.3%) due to non-cardiovascular non-malignancy diseases and 87 due to other causes. Table 2 shows the causes of death differed across magnesium levels (p < 0.001).
Table 2

Causes of death by baseline Magnesium level

Total (N = 4599)< 1.7 mg/dl (N = 628)1.7–2.6 mg/dl (N = 3854)> 2.6 mg/dl (N = 117)Chi-square p-value
Cause of death group< 0.001
 Malignant Neoplasms1292 (28.1)223 (35.5)1052 (27.3)17 (14.5)
 All Cardiovascular Diseases1597 (34.7)148 (23.6)1400 (36.3)49 (41.9)
 All Other Diseases1623 (35.3)246 (39.2)1328 (34.5)49 (41.9)
 Non-Disease related deaths87 (1.9)11 (1.8)74 (1.9)2 (1.7)

Statistics presented as N (column %)

Causes of death by baseline Magnesium level Statistics presented as N (column %)

Magnesium and overall and cause-specific death

Kaplan-Meier survival estimates at 3 years were 68.5% (95% CI: 65.9, 71.3), 72.2% (71.2, 73.2) and 61.5% (55.1, 68.7) for low, normal and high magnesium respectively (P < 0.001, Fig. 1). In the multivariable models adjusted for all relevant confounding variables, magnesium level < 1.7 mg/dl (vs. 1.7–2.6 mg/dl) was associated with higher overall mortality (HR = 1.14, 95% CI: 1.04, 1.24), and with higher sub-distribution hazards for non-cardiovascular non-malignancy mortality (HR = 1.29, 95% CI: 1.12, 1.49) (Table 3). Magnesium level > 2.6 mg/dl 1 (vs. 1.7–2.6 mg/dl) was associated with a higher risk of all-cause death only (HR = 1.23, 95% CI: 1.03, 1.48). In the model for all-cause death we found no evidence of an interaction between magnesium level and any of the following: eGFR, BMI group or potassium level. Figure 2 shows the associations between magnesium (as a continuous measure) and all-cause mortality.
Fig. 1

Kaplan-Meier survival estimates at 3 years for low, normal and high magnesium

Table 3

Association between magnesium level and mortality

MagnesiumAll-cause unadjusted HR (95% CI)All-cause HR (95% CI)*Cardiovascular SHR (95% CI)*Malignancy SHR (95% CI)*Non-cardio non-malignancy causes SHR (95% CI)*
All patients
  < 1.7 mg/dl1.14 (1.05, 1.24)1.14 (1.04, 1.24)0.91 (0.76, 1.08)1.14 (0.97, 1.33)1.29 (1.12, 1.49)
 1.7–2.6 mg/dlRefRefRefRefRef
  > 2.6 mg/dl1.44 (1.20, 1.72)1.23 (1.03, 1.48)1.11 (0.81, 1.51)0.71 (0.41, 1.22)1.26 (0.93, 1.71)

*Adjusted for age, African American, male, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, BMI, albumin, hemoglobin, calcium, Acid/Base (CO2), potassium, magnesium supplement, malignancy, hypertension, CAD, CHF, cerebrovascular disease, Insurance group, Outpatient ACEI/ARB, Outpatient Beta Blocker, outpatient diuretics, proton pump inhibitors, smoking, eGFR

*All adjusted models used 5 datasets created with multiple imputation and MI analyze to obtain the HR or SHR

Fig. 2

Relationship between magnesium (as a continuous measure) and all-cause mortality. The graph shows a U-shaped association between continuous magnesium and mortality

Kaplan-Meier survival estimates at 3 years for low, normal and high magnesium Association between magnesium level and mortality *Adjusted for age, African American, male, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, BMI, albumin, hemoglobin, calcium, Acid/Base (CO2), potassium, magnesium supplement, malignancy, hypertension, CAD, CHF, cerebrovascular disease, Insurance group, Outpatient ACEI/ARB, Outpatient Beta Blocker, outpatient diuretics, proton pump inhibitors, smoking, eGFR *All adjusted models used 5 datasets created with multiple imputation and MI analyze to obtain the HR or SHR Relationship between magnesium (as a continuous measure) and all-cause mortality. The graph shows a U-shaped association between continuous magnesium and mortality

Excluding patients with history of malignancy at baseline

In the sensitivity analyses excluding patients with malignancy (n = 7697), results were qualitatively similar to the primary analysis. Magnesium level < 1.7 mg/dl (vs. 1.7–2.6 mg/dl) was associated with higher overall mortality (HR = 1.16, 95% CI: 1.04, 1.29), and with higher sub-distribution hazards for non-cardiovascular non-malignancy mortality (HR = 1.37, 95% CI: 1.17, 1.61). Magnesium level > 2.6 mg/dl 1 (vs. 1.7–2.6 mg/dl) was associated with a higher risk of all-cause death only (HR = 1.27, 95% CI: 1.03, 1.55).

eGFR decline

There were 7248 patients with follow up eGFR that were included in this analysis, 927 with low magnesium, 6188 normal and 133 high. No significant differences in the slope of eGFR were found among magnesium level groups (Interaction P = 0.10). The group with low magnesium had slightly more negative or deleterious monthly slope of eGFR than the normal group, but the effect was not statistically significant (Parameter estimate = − 0.02, SE = 0.01, P = 0.05).

Discussion

In our study, we observed a U-shaped association between serum magnesium levels and mortality, with both hypomagnesemia and hypermagnesemia (HR = 1.23, 95% CI: 1.03, 1.48) demonstrating higher all-cause mortality. However, there was no association between serum magnesium levels and rate of eGFR decline. Hypomagnesemia has been linked with increased all-cause mortality [7, 17]. In a recent meta-analysis of magnesium levels in CKD and ESRD patients, Xiong et al. reviewed 20 studies with more than 200,000 participants and showed a clear association between hypomagnesemia and all-cause mortality [18]. In particular, low magnesium seem to be associated with increased cardiovascular mortality and the proposed mechanisms include promoting hypertension, cardiac arrhythmias [19], cardiac remodeling / fibrosis [20], oxidative stress, insulin resistance and arterial stiffening [17, 21]. It has also been suggested that magnesium has anti-atherosclerotic effects, and that hypomagnesemia promotes calcification in vascular smooth muscle cells [22], as well as endothelial cell dysfunction [17]. Our findings are consistent with the literature whereas hypomagnesemia was indeed associated with increased mortality. However, we did not observe a higher risk of cardiovascular mortality specifically. This could be due to the fact that in our population, patients with hypomagnesemia were younger and had lower incidence of cardiovascular disease. Rather, we report a higher prevalence of non-cardiac, non-malignancy related death. Conversely, the relationship between hypermagnesemia and mortality is not clearly established, whereas some studies suggest that hypermagnesemia confers a survival advantage in CKD patients, while others report an increase in mortality. An observational retrospective study of chronic hemodialysis patients suggested a survival advantage with slightly elevated serum magnesium levels, however, found that patients with significantly elevated magnesium levels ≥3.1 had higher mortality [17]. It is hypothesized that this may be due to over suppression of Parathyroid Hormone (PTH) with significant hypermagnesemia, and that iPTH < 50 pg/ml is associated with higher cardiovascular mortality [17]. This study did not include non-dialysis CKD patients, however. Other observational studies found that ESRD patients with arterial calcification, mitral annular calcification, and carotid intima-media thickness had lower serum magnesium levels on average, and therefore suggest that hypermagnesemia may play a protective role in this setting, however these studies did not examine survival [13]. However, other studies contradict those findings and show an association between hypermagnesemia and morbidity and mortality, notably in critically ill patients [23, 24]. Indeed, hypermagnesemia can lead to hypotension, cardiac conduction abnormalities, neuromuscular blockade and respiratory depression [25-27]. Our findings are in line with the latter set of studies whereas hypermagnesemia was associated with a higher prevalence of all-cause mortality. But there were no statistically significant differences in specific causes of death for patients with hypermagnesemia. There are few studies that examine the effects of hypomagnesemia and hypermagnesemia on CKD progression. One study found that hypomagnesemia was associated with an annual eGFR decline of 9.6% when baseline serum magnesium level was 1 mg/dL below the population mean, 3.5% annual eGFR decline if the serum magnesium level was 1 mg/dL above the population mean, and 6.6% eGFR decline for the population mean, however the effect of magnesium lost significance after adjustment for covariates [17]. Proposed mechanisms for why hypomagnesemia may be responsible for accelerated eGFR decline include potentiating hyperaldosteronism, hypertension, endothelial dysfunction, and oxidative stress, which may lead to further kidney injury [17]. In our study, we compared the slope or rate of decline in eGFR between CKD patients with hypomagnesemia, normal magnesium levels, and hypermagnesemia and found that the association between magnesium group and slope of eGFR was not statistically significant in either the unadjusted (P = 0.14) or adjusted (P = 0.10) models, suggesting that different magnesium levels are not associated with a different rate of eGFR decline in CKD patients. However, we do note that the group with low magnesium levels had a slightly more negative slope than the normal group, but the effect was not statistically significant. Strengths of our analysis include a large patient population with CKD stages 3–4, with data over several years, including a diverse patient population. However, retrospective analyses are prone to residual confounding. While we were able to control for multiple confounding variables that affect mortality, we were unable to adjust for patients on a calcimimetic, as well as for iPTH and phosphorous levels due to insufficient data. Additionally, we recognize that the patients who had their magnesium levels measured were different from those who did not and we realize this could bias our results. For example, serum magnesium appeared to be measured frequently in patients with malignancy and that could be driven by the known hypomagnesemic effects of several anti-cancer drugs. Unfortunately, we did not have data related to the use of cancer drugs, so we could not investigate this finding further. Finally, our patients have been followed in a single health care system, and therefore the data may not be generalizable.

Conclusion

In conclusion, hypomagnesemia and hypermagnesemia were both associated with increased mortality, demonstrating a U-shaped association between serum magnesium levels and mortality. Hypomagnesemia was associated specifically associated with increased non-cardiovascular, non-malignancy related death while hypermagnesemia did not demonstrate any cause specific mortality association. Magnesium levels are not associated with a difference in rate of eGFR decline in CKD patients.
Table 4

Patient characteristics for those having magnesium measured vs. not measured

FactorN missingOverall (N = 73,542)No Magnesium (N = 62,974)Have Magnesium (N = 10,568)p-value
Age072.0 ± 11.872.6 ± 11.468.7 ± 13.3< 0.001a
Male032,180 (43.8)27,211 (43.2)4969 (47.0)< 0.001c
African American09255 (12.6)7810 (12.4)1445 (13.7)< 0.001c
Smoking0< 0.001c
 No58,506 (79.6)51,092 (81.1)7414 (70.2)
 Yes5182 (7.0)4459 (7.1)723 (6.8)
 Missing9854 (13.4)7423 (11.8)2431 (23.0)
BMI253229.6 ± 6.629.7 ± 6.629.2 ± 7.0< 0.001a
BMI group0< 0.001c
  < 18.5 kg/m2963 (1.3)759 (1.2)204 (1.9)
 18.5–24.9 kg/m216,508 (22.4)13,789 (21.9)2719 (25.7)
 25–29.9 kg/m225,009 (34.0)21,718 (34.5)3291 (31.1)
 30–34.9 kg/m215,962 (21.7)13,865 (22.0)2097 (19.8)
 35–39.9 kg/m27281 (9.9)6312 (10.0)969 (9.2)
 40+ kg/m25287 (7.2)4530 (7.2)757 (7.2)
 Missing2532 (3.4)2001 (3.2)531 (5.0)
Diabetes017,409 (23.7)15,234 (24.2)2175 (20.6)< 0.001c
Malignancy018,226 (24.8)15,355 (24.4)2871 (27.2)< 0.001c
Hypertension062,427 (84.9)54,429 (86.4)7998 (75.7)< 0.001c
Hyperlipidemia056,763 (77.2)49,460 (78.5)7303 (69.1)< 0.001c
CAD014,958 (20.3)12,841 (20.4)2117 (20.0)0.40c
CHF05964 (8.1)4375 (6.9)1589 (15.0)< 0.001c
CVD06810 (9.3)5916 (9.4)894 (8.5)0.002c
PVD02432 (3.3)2153 (3.4)279 (2.6)< 0.001c
ACEI/ARB046,076 (62.7)40,051 (63.6)6025 (57.0)< 0.001c
Diuretics047,685 (64.8)41,001 (65.1)6684 (63.2)< 0.001c
Statin042,014 (57.1)36,876 (58.6)5138 (48.6)< 0.001c
Beta Blocker040,438 (55.0)34,475 (54.7)5963 (56.4)0.001c
Magnesium supplement07156 (9.7)4584 (7.3)2572 (24.3)< 0.001c
Proton pump inhibitor031,152 (42.4)25,916 (41.2)5236 (49.5)< 0.001c
eGFR047.8 ± 10.248.1 ± 10.146.3 ± 11.0< 0.001a
CKD stage0< 0.001c
 45–5950,169 (68.2)43,597 (69.2)6572 (62.2)
 30–4417,765 (24.2)14,877 (23.6)2888 (27.3)
 15–295608 (7.6)4500 (7.1)1108 (10.5)
Albumin10,7144.1 ± 0.464.1 ± 0.423.9 ± 0.59< 0.001a
Hemoglobin12,47512.8 ± 1.812.9 ± 1.812.3 ± 1.9< 0.001a
Potassium6844.3 ± 0.534.3 ± 0.524.3 ± 0.59< 0.001a
Calcium7709.5 ± 0.589.6 ± 0.569.4 ± 0.68< 0.001a
CO275125.9 ± 3.325.9 ± 3.225.8 ± 3.80.003a
Insurance grouped0< 0.001c
 Medicaid1320 (1.8)1079 (1.7)241 (2.3)
 Medicare50,892 (69.2)43,991 (69.9)6901 (65.3)
 Missing2796 (3.8)2205 (3.5)591 (5.6)
 Other18,534 (25.2)15,699 (24.9)2835 (26.8)

Statistics presented as Mean ± SD, or N (column %)

p-values: aANOVA, cPearson’s chi-square test

  26 in total

1.  Serum and erythrocyte magnesium in critically ill patients.

Authors:  C Guérin; C Cousin; F Mignot; M Manchon; G Fournier
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  1996-08       Impact factor: 17.440

Review 2.  Magnesium and cardiovascular complications of chronic kidney disease.

Authors:  Ziad A Massy; Tilman B Drüeke
Journal:  Nat Rev Nephrol       Date:  2015-05-12       Impact factor: 28.314

3.  Proton-pump inhibitor use is associated with low serum magnesium concentrations.

Authors:  John Danziger; Jeffrey H William; Daniel J Scott; Joon Lee; Li-wei Lehman; Roger G Mark; Michael D Howell; Leo A Celi; Kenneth J Mukamal
Journal:  Kidney Int       Date:  2013-01-16       Impact factor: 10.612

Review 4.  Molecular determinants of magnesium homeostasis: insights from human disease.

Authors:  R Todd Alexander; Joost G Hoenderop; René J Bindels
Journal:  J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2008-06-18       Impact factor: 10.121

5.  Hypomagnesemia and the risk of death and GFR decline in chronic kidney disease.

Authors:  Steven Van Laecke; Evi V Nagler; Francis Verbeke; Wim Van Biesen; Raymond Vanholder
Journal:  Am J Med       Date:  2013-07-24       Impact factor: 4.965

6.  Hypomagnesemia is a significant predictor of cardiovascular and non-cardiovascular mortality in patients undergoing hemodialysis.

Authors:  Yusuke Sakaguchi; Naohiko Fujii; Tatsuya Shoji; Terumasa Hayashi; Hiromi Rakugi; Yoshitaka Isaka
Journal:  Kidney Int       Date:  2013-08-28       Impact factor: 10.612

7.  Relationship between serum magnesium levels and cardiovascular events in chronic kidney disease patients.

Authors:  Mehmet Kanbay; Mahmut Ilker Yilmaz; Mugurel Apetrii; Mutlu Saglam; Halil Yaman; Hilmi Umut Unal; Mahmut Gok; Kayser Caglar; Yusuf Oguz; Mujdat Yenicesu; Hakki Cetinkaya; Tayfun Eyileten; Cengizhan Acikel; Abdulgaffar Vural; Adrian Covic
Journal:  Am J Nephrol       Date:  2012-08-30       Impact factor: 3.754

8.  A new equation to estimate glomerular filtration rate.

Authors:  Andrew S Levey; Lesley A Stevens; Christopher H Schmid; Yaping Lucy Zhang; Alejandro F Castro; Harold I Feldman; John W Kusek; Paul Eggers; Frederick Van Lente; Tom Greene; Josef Coresh
Journal:  Ann Intern Med       Date:  2009-05-05       Impact factor: 25.391

9.  Magnesium and outcomes in patients with chronic kidney disease: focus on vascular calcification, atherosclerosis and survival.

Authors:  Ziad A Massy; Tilman B Drüeke
Journal:  Clin Kidney J       Date:  2012-02

10.  Low serum magnesium and the development of atrial fibrillation in the community: the Framingham Heart Study.

Authors:  Abigail May Khan; Steven A Lubitz; Lisa M Sullivan; Jenny X Sun; Daniel Levy; Ramachandran S Vasan; Jared W Magnani; Patrick T Ellinor; Emelia J Benjamin; Thomas J Wang
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2012-11-21       Impact factor: 29.690

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  6 in total

1.  Correlation Between Parathyroid Hormone Levels with Urinary Magnesium Excretion in Patients with Non-Dialysis Dependent Chronic Kidney Disease.

Authors:  Raimunda Sheyla Carneiro Dias; Dyego José de Araújo Brito; Elisângela Milhomem Dos Santos; Rayanna Cadilhe de Oliveira Costa; Andrea Martins Melo Fontenele; Elane Viana Hortegal Furtado; Joyce Santos Lages; Alcione Miranda Dos Santos; Elton Jonh Freitas Santos; Érika Cristina Ribeiro de Lima Carneiro; Maria Célia Cruz Diniz; Carla Déa Trindade Barbosa; Alessandra Costa de Sales Muniz; Ana Karina Teixeira da Cunha França; Natalino Salgado Filho; Denizar Vianna Araújo; Mário Bernardo-Filho
Journal:  Int J Nephrol Renovasc Dis       Date:  2020-11-19

Review 2.  Magnesium-A More Important Role in CKD-MBD than We Thought.

Authors:  Ileana Peride; Mirela Tiglis; Tiberiu Paul Neagu; Andrei Niculae; Ionel Alexandru Checherita
Journal:  Diagnostics (Basel)       Date:  2022-04-01

Review 3.  Magnesium in renal fibrosis.

Authors:  Mengtuan Long; Xiaoyu Zhu; Xuejiao Wei; Dan Zhao; Lili Jiang; Chenhao Li; Die Jin; Changxiu Miao; Yujun Du
Journal:  Int Urol Nephrol       Date:  2022-01-20       Impact factor: 2.266

4.  Influence of Demographic and Lifestyle Variables on Plasma Magnesium Concentrations and Their Associations with Cardiovascular Risk Factors in a Mediterranean Population.

Authors:  Rocío Barragán; Juan Llopis; Olga Portolés; Jose V Sorlí; Oscar Coltell; Lorenzo Rivas-García; Eva M Asensio; Carolina Ortega-Azorín; Dolores Corella; Cristina Sánchez-González
Journal:  Nutrients       Date:  2020-04-08       Impact factor: 5.717

5.  Serum Magnesium and Cardiovascular Outcomes and Mortality in CKD: The Chronic Renal Insufficiency Cohort (CRIC).

Authors:  Lavinia Negrea; Sarah J DeLozier; Jessica L Janes; Mahboob Rahman; Mirela Dobre
Journal:  Kidney Med       Date:  2021-01-12

6.  Inflammatory-Metal Profile as a Hallmark for COVID-19 Severity During Pregnancy.

Authors:  Johana Vásquez-Procopio; Aurora Espejel-Nuñez; Johnatan Torres-Torres; Raigam Jafet Martinez-Portilla; Salvador Espino Y Sosa; Paloma Mateu-Rogell; Veronica Ortega-Castillo; Maricruz Tolentino-Dolores; Otilia Perichart-Perera; José Osman Franco-Gallardo; José Alberto Carranco-Martínez; Scarleth Prieto-Rodríguez; Mario Guzmán-Huerta; Fanis Missirlis; Guadalupe Estrada-Gutierrez
Journal:  Front Cell Dev Biol       Date:  2022-08-09
  6 in total

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