| Literature DB >> 33595731 |
Shun Manabe1, Hiroshi Kataoka2,3, Toshio Mochizuki1,4, Kazuhiro Iwadoh5, Yusuke Ushio1, Keiko Kawachi1, Kentaro Watanabe1, Saki Watanabe1, Taro Akihisa1, Shiho Makabe1, Masayo Sato1, Naomi Iwasa1, Rie Yoshida1, Yukako Sawara1, Norio Hanafusa6, Ken Tsuchiya6, Kosaku Nitta1.
Abstract
Longitudinal studies evaluating the association between visceral fat area (VFA) and kidney function decline in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) are limited, and little is known about VFA interactions contributing to the kidney prognosis (e.g. interactions between VFA ≥ 100 cm2 and age, sex, and CKD category). In this study, we stratified patients with CKD according to VFA category, as well as age, sex, CKD category, hyperglycemia, and diabetes mellitus, and determined the ability of obesity-related indicators (body mass index, waist circumference, subcutaneous fat area, visceral-to-subcutaneous fat ratio) to predict the renal prognosis. Kidney outcomes (≥ 50% estimated glomerular filtration rate decline or end-stage kidney disease) were examined in 200 patients with CKD (median follow-up, 12.3 years). On multivariable Cox analysis, an increase in VFA (10-cm2 increase) was significantly associated with kidney outcomes in the entire cohort, and VFA was significantly associated with kidney disease progression even in the VFA < 100 cm2 sub-cohort. Interestingly, the hazard ratio (HR) was higher for VFA (10-cm2 increase) than for the VFA ≥ 100 cm2 sub-cohort (HR 1.33 vs. 1.07). Overall, VFA was found to be the most versatile obesity-related indicator associated with kidney disease progression. VFA was associated with the primary outcome in the sub-cohorts of CKD stages 1-2, hyperglycemia, and diabetes mellitus. A high VFA was a significant kidney prognostic factor in the entire CKD cohort, with greater significance in patients with VFA < 100 cm2 than in patients with VFA ≥ 100 cm2. Our results may provide new insights into strategies for treating CKD.Entities:
Keywords: Abdominal obesity; Chronic kidney disease; Prognosis; VFA < 100 cm2; Visceral fat area
Year: 2021 PMID: 33595731 DOI: 10.1007/s10157-021-02029-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Exp Nephrol ISSN: 1342-1751 Impact factor: 2.801