1. Potassium Trajectories prior to Dialysis and Mortality following Dialysis Initiation in Patients with Advanced CKD.
- Author
-
Dashputre, Ankur A, Sumida, Keiichi, Potukuchi, Praveen K, Kar, Suryatapa, Obi, Yoshitsugu, Thomas, Fridtjof, Molnar, Miklos Z, Streja, Elani, Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, and Kovesdy, Csaba P
- Subjects
Humans ,Kidney Failure ,Chronic ,Potassium ,Renal Dialysis ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Veterans ,United States ,Female ,Male ,Chronic kidney disease ,Dialysis ,Mortality ,Slope ,Kidney Disease ,Clinical Research ,Good Health and Well Being ,Clinical Sciences ,Medical Physiology ,Urology & Nephrology - Abstract
IntroductionPatients with advanced non-dialysis-dependent CKD (NDD-CKD) have a reduced ability for maintaining plasma potassium (K) in normal range. Deviation from normal plasma K ranges is associated with increased mortality; however, the average trajectory of plasma K over time in patients with advanced NDD-CKD and the outcomes associated with plasma K trajectory are unknown.MethodsWe identified 34,167 US veterans with advanced NDD-CKD transitioning to dialysis between October 2007 and March 2015 with at least 1 K measurement each year over a 3-year period prior to dialysis transition (3-year prelude). The K trajectory defined as the change in K (slope) per year over the entire 3-year prelude was estimated using linear mixed-effects models. The association between unadjusted (crude) K slope (categorized as stable [-0.09 to 0.09 mEq/L/year], decreasing [≤-0.10 mEq/L/year], and increasing [≥0.10 mEq/L/year]) and time to all-cause and cardiovascular mortality during the 6 months following dialysis initiation was assessed using multivariable-adjusted survival models.ResultsThe crude and multivariable-adjusted K slopes (mean, 95% CI) over the 3-year prelude were 0.008 (0.0059, 0.0110) and -0.15 mEq/L/year (-0.19, -0.11), respectively. Decreasing K slope was associated with higher multivariable-adjusted risk of all-cause mortality (adjusted hazard ratio [95% CI] vs. stable K slope: 1.08 [1.00-1.17]). No association was observed between K slope and cardiovascular mortality.Discussion/conclusionThe average intraindividual plasma K trajectory is remarkably stable in patients with advanced NDD-CKD. A decreasing K slope is associated with higher all-cause mortality risk.
- Published
- 2021