77 results on '"M. van Buren"'
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2. Serum Potassium and Mortality Risk in Hemodialysis Patients: A Cohort StudyPlain-Language Summary
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Esther N.M. de Rooij, Friedo W. Dekker, Saskia Le Cessie, Ewout J. Hoorn, Johan W. de Fijter, Ellen K. Hoogeveen, J.A. Bijlsma, M. Boekhout, W.H. Boer, P.J.M. van der Boog, H.R. Büller, M. van Buren, F.Th. de Charro, C.J. Doorenbos, M.A. van den Dorpel, A. van Es, W.J. Fagel, G.W. Feith, C.W.H. de Fijter, L.A.M. Frenken, W. Grave, J.A.C.A. van Geelen, P.G.G. Gerlag, J.P.M.C. Gorgels, R.M. Huisman, K.J. Jager, K. Jie, W.A.H. Koning-Mulder, M.I. Koolen, T.K. Kremer Hovinga, A.T.J. Lavrijssen, A.J. Luik, J. van der Meulen, K.J. Parlevliet, M.H.M. Raasveld, F.M. van der Sande, M.J.M. Schonck, M.M.J. Schuurmans, C.E.H. Siegert, C.A. Stegeman, P. Stevens, J.G.P. Thijssen, R.M. Valentijn, G.H. Vastenburg, C.A. Verburgh, H.H. Vincent, and P.F. Vos
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hemodialysis, hyperkalemia, hypokalemia, mortality, potassium ,Diseases of the genitourinary system. Urology ,RC870-923 - Abstract
Rationale & Objective: Both hypo- and hyperkalemia can cause fatal cardiac arrhythmias. Although predialysis serum potassium level is a known modifiable risk factor for death in patients receiving hemodialysis, especially for hypokalemia, this risk may be underestimated. Therefore, we investigated the relationship between predialysis serum potassium level and death in incident hemodialysis patients and whether there is an optimum level. Study Design: Prospective multicenter cohort study. Setting & Participants: 1,117 incident hemodialysis patients (aged >18 years) from the Netherlands Cooperative Study on the Adequacy of Dialysis-2 study were included and followed from their first hemodialysis treatment until death, transplantation, switch to peritoneal dialysis, or a maximum of 10 years. Exposure: Predialysis serum potassium levels were obtained every 6 months and divided into 6 categories: ≤4.0 mmol/L, >4.0 mmol/L to ≤4.5 mmol/L, >4.5 mmol/L to ≤5.0 mmol/L, >5.0 mmol/L to ≤5.5 mmol/L (reference), >5.5 mmol/L to ≤6.0 mmol/L, and >6.0 mmol/L. Outcomes: 6-month all-cause mortality. Analytical Approach: Cox proportional hazards and restricted cubic spline analyses with time-dependent predialysis serum potassium levels were used to calculate the adjusted HRs for death. Results: At baseline, the mean age of the patients was 63 years (standard deviation, 14 years), 58% were men, 26% smoked, 24% had diabetes, 32% had cardiovascular disease, the mean serum potassium level was 5.0 mmol/L (standard deviation, 0.8 mmol/L), 7% had a low subjective global assessment score, and the median residual kidney function was 3.5 mL/min/1.73 m2 (IQR, 1.4-4.8 mL/min/1.73 m2). During the 10-year follow-up, 555 (50%) deaths were observed. Multivariable adjusted HRs for death according to the 6 potassium categories were as follows: 1.42 (95% CI, 1.01-1.99), 1.09 (95% CI, 0.82-1.45), 1.21 (95% CI, 0.94-1.56), 1 (reference), 0.95 (95% CI, 0.71-1.28), and 1.32 (95% CI, 0.97-1.81). Limitations: Shorter intervals between potassium measurements would have allowed for more precise mortality risk estimations. Conclusions: We found a U-shaped relationship between serum potassium level and death in incident hemodialysis patients. A low predialysis serum potassium level was associated with a 1.4-fold stronger risk of death than the optimal level of approximately 5.1 mmol/L. These results may imply the cautious use of potassium-lowering therapy and a potassium-restricted diet in patients receiving hemodialysis.
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- 2022
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3. The kidney, subclinical thyroid disease and cardiovascular outcomes in older patients
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Stella Trompet, D M van Velzen, Ian Ford, David J. Stott, Joop Jukema, S. Simsek, Laurien E Zijlstra, Simon P. Mooijaart, and M. van Buren
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endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,endocrine system diseases ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Renal function ,lcsh:Diseases of the endocrine glands. Clinical endocrinology ,Gastroenterology ,Endocrinology ,cardiovascular disease ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,Clinical endpoint ,Medicine ,kidney function ,Subclinical infection ,lcsh:RC648-665 ,thyroid function ,business.industry ,Research ,Thyroid disease ,Thyroid ,medicine.disease ,older patients ,R1 ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Thyroid function ,business ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,Pravastatin ,Hormone ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Objective Thyroid hormones have been implicated to play a role in cardiovascular disease, along with studies linking thyroid hormone to kidney function. The aim of this study is to investigate whether kidney function modifies the association of subclinical thyroid dysfunction and the risk of cardiovascular outcomes. Methods In total, 5804 patients were included in the PROspective Study of Pravastatin in the Elderly at Risk (PROSPER). For the current analysis, 426 were excluded because of overt thyroid disease at baseline or 6 months, 266 because of inconsistent thyroid function at baseline and 6 months, 294 because of medication use that could influence thyroid function, and 16 because of missing kidney or thyroid values. Participants with normal fT4 were classified, based on TSH both at inclusion and 6 months, into three groups: subclinical hypothyroidism (TSH >4.5 mIU/L); euthyroidism (TSH = 0.45–4.5 mIU/L); and subclinical hyperthyroidism (TSH 60 mL/min/1.73 m2. The primary endpoint consists of death from coronary heart disease, non-fatal myocardial infarction and (non)fatal stroke. Results Mean age was 75.3 years, and 49.0% patients were male. Mean follow-up was 3.2 years. Of all participants, 109 subjects (2.2%) had subclinical hypothyroidism, 4573 (94.0%) had euthyroidism, and 182 (3.7%) subclinical hyperthyroidism. For patients with subclinical hypothyroidism, euthyroidism, and subclinical hyperthyroidism, primary outcome occurred in 9 (8.3%), 712 (15.6%), and 23 (12.6%) patients, respectively. No statistically significant relationship was found between subclinical thyroid dysfunction and primary endpoint with adjusted hazard ratios of 0.51 (0.24–1.07) comparing subclinical hyperthyroidism and 0.90 (0.58–1.39) comparing subclinical hypothyroidism with euthyroidism. Neither was this relationship present in any of the strata of kidney function, nor did kidney function interact with subclinical thyroid dysfunction in the association with primary endpoint (P interaction = 0.602 for subclinical hyperthyroidism and 0.388 for subclinical hypothyroidism). Conclusions In this secondary analysis from PROSPER, we found no evidence that the potential association between thyroid hormones and cardiovascular disease is modified by kidney function in older patients with subclinical thyroid dysfunction.
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- 2020
4. The role of administrators in supporting questioning for understanding
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Gail M. Van Buren
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- 2021
5. MO505IMPACT OF THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC ON SYMPTOMS OF ANXIETY AND DEPRESSION AND HEALTH-RELATED QUALITY OF LIFE IN OLDER PATIENTS WITH CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE
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Carlijn G N Voorend, Hanneke Joosten, Casper F. M. Franssen, Willem Jan W Bos, M. van Buren, Noeleen C. Berkhout-Byrne, M. Nieberg, M. van Oevelen, Alferso C. Abrahams, and Yvette Meuleman
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Transplantation ,education.field_of_study ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Population ,CKD. Clinical epidemiology ,medicine.disease ,Mental health ,Mini Orals (sorted by session) ,Quality of life ,Nephrology ,Internal medicine ,Pandemic ,Medicine ,Anxiety ,medicine.symptom ,business ,education ,Prospective cohort study ,AcademicSubjects/MED00340 ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Kidney disease - Abstract
Background and Aims Older patients with advanced chronic kidney disease (CKD) are at increased risk for a severe course of the coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) and vulnerable to mental health problems. We aimed to investigate prevalence and associated patient (demographic and clinical) characteristics of mental wellbeing (health-related quality of life [HRQoL] and symptoms of depression and anxiety) before and during the COVID-19 pandemic in older patients with advanced CKD. Method An ongoing Dutch multicentre prospective cohort study enrols patients of ≥70 years with an eGFR Results The 82 included patients had a median age of 77.5 years (inter-quartile range 73.9-82.1), 77% was male and none had tested positive for COVID-19. Cross-sectionally, 67% of the patients reported to be more anxious for COVID-19 because of their kidney disease, and 43% of the patients stated that their quality of life was reduced due to the COVID-19 pandemic (Figure 1). Higher COVID-19-related stress was associated with a lower education level (p=0.036), and patients who reported to feel more down due to COVID-19 were more often female (p=0.020). Anxiety scores were higher among females compared to males (median 4.0 [IQR 3.0-9.0] versus 2.0 [0.0-6.0], p=0.020), and weakly associated to a decline in eGFR (correlation coefficient 0.197, p=0.023). Compared to pre-COVID-19, presence of depressive symptoms had increased (11% to 22%; p=0.022) and physical HRQoL declined (40.4±10.1 to 36.1±10.4, p Conclusion Our findings show that older patients with advanced CKD suffered from disease-related anxiety for COVID-19, increased depressive symptoms, and reduced physical HRQOL during the COVID-19 pandemic. The impact of the pandemic on this vulnerable patient group extends beyond increased mortality risk, and awareness of mental health problems during the pandemic is essential. More in-depth investigation on disease-related COVID-19 concerns and its implications for the CKD population is needed.
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- 2021
6. Dental caries clusters among adolescents
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Justine L. Kolker, Steven M. Levy, Karin Weber-Gasparoni, Alexandra M. Curtis, Teresa A. Marshall, Joseph E. Cavanaugh, John J. Warren, and John M. Van Buren
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Male ,Toothbrushing ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Dental Caries ,Article ,Tooth brushing ,03 medical and health sciences ,Sex Factors ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Epidemiology ,Statistics ,medicine ,Humans ,Water fluoride ,Longitudinal Studies ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,General Dentistry ,Multinomial logistic regression ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,030206 dentistry ,Iowa ,Cariostatic Agents ,Fruit and Vegetable Juices ,Sample size determination ,Child, Preschool ,Cohort ,Educational Status ,Female ,Akaike information criterion ,business ,Algorithms ,Arithmetic mean ,Demography - Abstract
Objectives There have been very few longitudinal studies of dental caries in adolescents, and little study of the caries risk factors in this age group. The purpose of this study was to describe different caries trajectories and associated risk factors among members of the Iowa Fluoride Study (IFS) cohort. Methods The IFS recruited a birth cohort from 1992 to 1995, and has gathered dietary, fluoride and behavioural data at least twice yearly since recruitment. Examinations for dental caries were completed when participants were ages 5, 9, 13 and 17 years. For this study, only participants with decayed and filled surface (DFS) caries data at ages 9, 13 and 17 were included (N=396). The individual DFS counts at age 13 and the DFS increment from 13 to 17 were used to identify distinct caries trajectories using Ward's hierarchical clustering algorithm. A number of multinomial logistic regression models were developed to predict trajectory membership, using longitudinal dietary, fluoride and demographic/behavioural data from 9 to 17 years. Model selection was based on the akaike information criterion (AIC). Results Several different trajectory schemes were considered, and a three-trajectory scheme—no DFS at age 17 (n=142), low DFS (n=145) and high DFS (n=109)—was chosen to balance sample sizes and interpretability. The model selection process resulted in use of an arithmetic average for dietary variables across the period from 9 to 17 years. The multinomial logistic regression model with the best fit included the variables maternal education level, 100% juice consumption, brushing frequency and sex. Other favoured models also included water and milk consumption and home water fluoride concentration. The high caries cluster was most consistently associated with lower maternal education level, lower 100% juice consumption, lower brushing frequency and being female. Conclusions The use of a clustering algorithm and use of Akaike's Information Criterion (AIC) to determine the best representation of the data were useful means in presenting longitudinal caries data. Findings suggest that high caries incidence in adolescence is associated with lower maternal educational level, less frequent tooth brushing, lower 100% juice consumption and being female.
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- 2017
7. Design and Baseline Characteristics of the Finerenone in Reducing Cardiovascular Mortality and Morbidity in Diabetic Kidney Disease Trial
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Ruilope, Luis M, Agarwal, Rajiv, Anker, Stefan D, Bakris, George L, Filippatos, Gerasimos, Nowack, Christina, Kolkhof, Peter, Joseph, Amer, Mentenich, Nicole, Pitt, Bertram, Diego, Besada, Alfredo, Wassermann, Julio, Bittar, Alicia, Elbert, Augusto, Vallejos, Gloria, Viñes, Hugo, Sanabria, Federico Pérez Manghi, Alberto, Liberman, Inés, Bartolacci, Diego, Aizenberg, Mariano, Chahin, Laura, Maffei, Elizabeth, Gelersztein, Bernhard, Ludvik, Hans-Robert, Schönherr, Heinz, Drexel, Wolfgang, Preiß, Ursula, Hanusch, Peter, Neudorfer, Friedrich, Prischl, Bernhard, Paulweber, Christoph, Ebenbichler, Rudolf, Prager, Harald, Sourij, Gerit-Holger, Schernthaner, Martin, Clodi, Evelyn, Fliesser-Görzer, Elif, Ekinci, Richard, Macisaac, David, Packham, Hugo, Stephenson, Michael, Suranyi, Gary, Wittert, Katie-Jane, Wynne, Alexia, Pape, Duncan, Topliss, Peter, Colman, Craig, Nelson, James, Vandeleur, David, Colquhoun, Simon, Roger, Peak Mann Mah, Walter, Abhayaratna, Luc VAN Gaal, Pieter, Gillard, Jean-Michel, Hougardy, Marijn, Speeckaert, Koen, Stas, Wendy, Engelen, Francis, Duyck, André, Scheen, Hilde, Vanbelleghem, Peter, Doubel, Svetla, Vasileva, Rosen, Rashkov, Boyan, Nonchev, Theodora, Temelkova-Kurktschieva, Mariana, Yoncheva-Mihaylova, Rangel, Rangelov, Neli, Klyuchkova, Pavel, Stanchev, Zhivko, Tagarev, Radostina, Boshnyashka, Petya, Manova, Zhulieta, Prakova, Mariya, Lucheva, Valentina, Gushterova, Ghassan, Farah, Dimitar, Georgiev, Mariyana, Pichmanova, Dotska, Minkova, Bilyana, Stoyanovska-Elencheva, Maria Eugenia Canziani, Miguel, Hissa, Irene, Noronha, Joao Eduardo Salles, Daniela, Antunes, Freddy, Eliaschewitz, Carlos Eduardo Figueiredo, Rogerio de Paula, Luis, Canani, Maurilo Leite Jr, Bruno, Paolino, Rosangela, Rea, Sergio, Vencio, Claudia, Brito, Raphael, Paschoalin, Roberto Pecoits Filho, Eduardo, Vasconcellos, Nathalia, Paschoalin, Adriana, Forti, Roberto, Botelho, Miguel, Riella, Dalton, Precoma, Maria, Cerqueira, Lilia, Maia, Evandro, Portes, Marcio, Pereira, Joanne, Liutkus, Dennis, O Keefe, Richard, Tytus, Brian, Carlson, James, Conway, Michael, Walsh, Igor, Wilderman, Andrew, Steele, Sheldon, Tobe, Louise, Vitou, Karthik, Tennankore, Valdemar, Martinho, Philip, Mcfarlane, Daniel, Shu, Serge, Cournoyer, Richard, Dumas, Giuseppe, Mazza, Guy, Tellier, George, Tsoukas, Stanley, Weisnagel, Jean-Francois, Yale, Sameh, Fikry, Randolph, Hart, Pavel, Hamet, Francois, Madore, Paul, Barre, Daniel, Schwartz, Allan, Kelly, Ivor, Teitelbaum, Sean, Peterson, Sam, Henein, Richard, Goluch, Gregoire, Wuerzner, Markus, Laimer, Stefan, Bilz, Marc, Donath, Gottfried, Rudofsky, Christopher, Strey, Antoinette, Pechère-Bertschi, Paola, Varleta, Fernando, González, Marcelo, Medina, Carmen, Romero, Victor, Saavedra, Juan Carlos Prieto, Eliana, Reyes, Juan Carlos Palma, Jorge, Cobos, Zhihong, Liu, Dalong, Zhu, Nan, Chen, Fang, Liu, Wang, Li, Qing, Su, Bingyin, Shi, Aiping, Yin, Hao, Wang, Yan, Li, Jianying, Niu, Chaoqing, Wu, Xinjun, Wang, Ying, Zhang, Peng, Ai, Jianhua, Ma, Yuxiu, Li, Hongguang, Zheng, Minxiang, Lei, Zhaohui, Mo, Nanwei, Tong, Jinluo, Cheng, Youping, Dong, Xudong, Xu, Qinkai, Chen, Tianjun, Guan, Gang, Long, Changying, Xing, Ling, Li, Yinghong, Liu, Hao, Zhang, Ling, Zhong, Zhonghe, Li, Longyi, Zeng, Jiali, Wei, Hanqing, Cai, Tianfeng, Wu, Weiping, Lu, Ning, Xu, Yibing, Lu, Dejun, Chen, Ruifang, Bu, Jiansong, Shen, Junwu, Dong, Zhiquan, Zhao, Fei, Xiong, Fangfang, Jiang, Jinkui, Yang, Jian, Kuang, Guoyuan, Lu, Lihua, Wang, Yanlin, Zhang, Shuifu, Tang, Weiying, Guo, Jian, Liu, Sheng, Jiang, Fang, Yi, Yuming, Du, Zhuxing, Sun, Yuantao, Liu, Liyong, Zhong, Dongmei, Li, Hongmei, Li, Chuanming, Hao, Feixia, Shen, Jianqin, Wang, Jingmei, Li, Dora, Molina, Carlos, Cure, Jaime, Ibarra, Gustavo, Aroca, Hernán, Yupanqui, Eric, Hernández, Mónica, López, Gregorio, Sánchez, Germán, Barreto, Edgar, Arcos, Miguel, Urina, William, Kattah, Carlos, Durán, Clara, Arango, Julian, Coronel, Guillermo, Blanco, Mónica, Terront, Gustavo, Guzmán, Luis, García, Carlos, Jaramillo, Manuel, Liévano, Diego, Benitez, Tatiana, Cárdenas, Iván, Villegas, Sandra, Barrera, Nicolás, Jaramillo, Rodrigo, Botero, Nelly Beltrán López, Freddy, Trujillo, Martin, Prazny, Jitka Hasalova Zapletalova, Libor, Okenka, Dino, Alferi, Tomas, Edelsberger, Pavel, Tomanek, Jiri, Brezina, Olga, Hola, Jana, Houdova, Petr, Bucek, David, Karasek, Sarka, Kopecka, Richard, Kovar, Michal, Brada, Lucie, Hornova, Eva, Krcova, Hana, Lubanda, Vlasta, Kutejova, Jiri, Kuchar, Helena, Hrmova, Jiri, Pumprla, Magdalena, Mokrejsova, Drahomira, Gulakova, Ivo, Matyasek, Thilo, Krüger, Hermann, Haller, Thorsten, Koch, Ludger, Rose, Diethelm, Tschöpe, Lutz, Stemler, Volker, Schettler, Andreas, Pfützner, Karl, Derwahl, Thomas, Horacek, Helena, Sigal, Heidrun, Täschner, Ingolf, Schiefke, Andreas, Hagenow, Andreas, Birkenfeld, Christoph, Axthelm, Christoph, Wanner, Klaus, Busch, Heike, Schlichthaar, Christoph, Hasslacher, Stefan, Degenhardt, Markus van der Giet, Georg, Strack, Norbert, Schöll, Bernhard, R Winkelmann, Lars, Rump, Ruth, Nischik, Bernd, Schröppel, Thomas, Giebel, Achim, Ulmer, Andrea, Rinke, Christel, Contzen, Wolfgang, Jungmair, Nicole, Toursarkissian, Christof, Kloos, Joachim, Müller, Thomas, Schürholz, Hermann, Braun, Frank, Pistrosch, Per, Poulsen, Claus, Juhl, Joan, Nielsen, Jesper, Bech, Ole, Rasmussen, Peter, Rossing, Jens, Faber, Thure, Krarup, Morten, Lindhardt, Ulrik Pedersen-Bjergaard Pedersen-Bjergaard, Karoline, Schousboe, Jørgen, Hangaard, Sten, Madsbad, Gunnar, Gislason, Grzegorz Jaroslaw Pacyk, Olga González Albarrán, Carlos Sánchez Juan, José Julián Segura de la Morena, Secundino Cigarrán Guldris, Francisco Martínez Deben, José María Pascual Izuel, Julio Pascual Santos, Francesca, Calero, Alfonso, Soto, Manuel Polaina Rusillo, Josep, Redón, Josep, Galcerán, Juan, Mediavilla, Mª Dolores Martínez Esteban, Alfredo, Michán, Fernando de Álvaro, Javier Escalada San Martín, Josep Cruzado Garrit, Cristina, Castro, Fernando Cereto Castro, Rafael Santamaría Olmo, Esteban, Poch, Judith, Martins, Julio Hernández Jaras, Meritxell, Ibernón, Daniel, Seron, Hanane, Bouarich, Maribel, Troya, Jorma, Strand, Ilkka, Kantola, Sakari, Nieminen, Arvo, Koistinen, Kristiina, Kananen, Sakari, Sulosaari, Mikko, Honkasalo, Pirkko, Korsoff, Tuomo, Nieminen, Karita, Sadeharju, Kari, Humaloja, Jorma, Lahtela, Philippe, Zaoui, Jean-Pierre, Fauvel, Ronan, Roussel, Didier, Gouet, Pierre, Serusclat, Sylvaine, Clavel, Bruno, Guerci, Bruno, Verges, Olivier, Moranne, Arnaud, Monier, Alexandre, Klein, François, Chantrel, Yannick LE Meur, Rafik, Mesbah, Bertrand, Cariou, Dominique, Guerrot, Karim, Gallouj, Kieran, Mccafferty, Arutchelvam, Vijayaraman, Yuk-Ki, Wong, Dhanya, Kalathil, Sam, Rice, Sui Phi Kon, Hassan, Kahal, Cuong, Dang, Fahmy, Hanna, Christina, Kyriakidou, Imrozia, Arif, Anne, Kilvert, Pauline, Swift, Ioannis, Stefanidis, Ploumis, Passadakis, Aikaterini, Papagianni, Erifili, Hatziagelaki, Dorothea, Papadopoulou, Ioannis, Boletis, Ioanna, Makriniotou, Theodora, Kounadi, Ioannis, Ioannidis, Paul, Lee, Ching Wan Ronald Ma, Vincent, Yeung, Tai Pang Ip, Ebrahim, Noori, Julianna, Kiss, Eleonora, Harcsa, Albert, Szocs, Szilard, Vasas, Krisztina, Wudi, Robert, Kirschner, Dora, Bajcsi, Beata, Lamboy, Botond, Literati-Nagy, Gabor, Nyirati, Gizella, Petro, Karoly, Schneider, Katalin, Keltai, Akos, Kalina, Peter, Danos, Szilvia, Kazup, Zsolt, Zilahi, Judit, Simon, Laszlo, Kovacs, Marianna, Zsom, Margit, Mileder, Laszlo, Nagy, Yoram, Yagil, Julio, Wainstein, Ofri, Mosenzon, Rosane Abramof Ness, Sydney Ben Chetrit, Faiad, Adawi, Idit, Liberty, Ehud, Grossman, Mazen, Elias, Zaher, Armaly, Evgeny, Farber, Assy, Nimer, Amir, Bashkin, Gil, Chernin, Shai, Efrati, Doron, Schwartz, Noa Berar Yanay, Mariela, Glandt, Robert, Zukermann, Majdi, Halabi, Shaul, Atar, Mahmud, Darawsha, Norberto, Perico, Gaetano La Manna, Giovanni Giorgio Battaglia, Domenico, Santoro, Piermarco, Piatti, Bonora, Enzo, Davide Carlo Maggi, Paolo, Calabrò, Roberto, Cimino, Roberto, Trevisan, Paolo, Fiorina, Antonio, Pisani, Antonello, Pani, Gennaro, Santorelli, Carlo Antonio Bossi, Giancarlo, Tonolo, Enrico, Fiaccadori, Anna Maria Veronelli, Michele, Emdin, Paola, Ponzani, Maria Cristina Gregorini, Franco Luigi Cavalot, Carlo Bruno Giorda, Taro, Shibasaki, Akihiro, Hamasaki, Takashi, Nomiyama, Sunao, Matsubayashi, Junji, Shinoda, Kazunari, Matsumoto, Hideo, Kanehara, Yoshihide, Hirohata, Masayo, Yamada, Jun, Nakazawa, Yoshimitsu, Yamasaki, Mikihiro, Nakayama, Ryuichi, Furuya, Osamu, Ebisui, Satsuki, Kawasaki, Daishiro, Yamada, Masayuki, Noritake, Tamayo, Ishiko, Nobuhiro, Sasaki, Daisuke, Suzuki, Asami, Tanaka, Miyuki, Kubota, Hideo, Araki, Hiroshi, Ohashi, Takeshi, Osonoi, Kazuo, Yamagata, Naruhiro, Fujita, Daisuke, Kanda, Seiichi, Tanaka, Junko, Koide, Masao, Ishii, Takayuki, Ogiwara, Masaaki, Suzuki, Taiji, Sekigami, Takayuki, Higashi, Yuko, Yambe, Yoshiro, Kusano, Hidetoshi, Kikuchi, Hiroaki, Miyaoka, Kiyoe, Kato, Masayuki, Kashima, Fumiko, Yamakawa, Shuji, Horinouchi, Hirofumi, Imoto, Hiroshi, Sobajima, Hidetoshi, Kanai, Naoki, Matsuoka, Hirotaka, Shibata, Akemi, Inagaki, Toshiyuki, Sugiura, Toru, Sugiyama, Hidekatsu, Yanai, Yoshiyuki, Hamamoto, Masahiro, Hatazaki, Terumasa, Hayashi, Kunihisa, Kobayashi, Satoshi, Murao, Makoto, Ujihara, Kazuya, Sugitatsu, Katsunori, Kawamitsu, Ken, Yamakawa, Izumi, Tsunematsu, Fumi, Kikuchi, Hideaki, Jinnouchi, Tetsuyuki, Yasuda, Hajime, Maeda, Yasuto, Matsuo, Hideki, Okamoto, Takeshi, Katsuki, Ken, Yajima, Takeshi, Morita, Masayuki, Inagaki, Wooje, Lee, Jungoo, Kang, Cheol Young Park, Hyesoon, Kim, Singon, Kim, Youcheol, Hwang, Injoo, Kim, Jaehyeon, Kim, Young Min Cho, Byungwan, Lee, Choonhee, Chung, Soo, Lim, Jae Myung Yu, Dovile, Kriauciuniene, Antanas, Navickas, Audrone, Velaviciene, Egle, Urbanaviciene, Gediminas, Urbonas, Jurate, Lasiene, Lina, Radzeviciene, Ron, Gansevoort, Adriaan, Kooy, G Lieverse, A, L Penne, E, Ruud J, M van Leendert, M van Buren, H Boonstra, A, C Bakker, R, Marielle, Krekels, B Brouwer, C, T Luik, P, J N, M Barendregt, Bert-Jan van den Born, Trine, Finnes, Thomas, Karlsson, Hilde, Selsås, Emil, Asprusten, Robert, Hagemeier, Erik, Eriksen, Knut, Risberg, Hans, Høivik, Leidulv, Solnør, Frode, Thorup, Jan, Rocke, Rick, Cutfield, Peter, Dunn, Jeremy, Krebs, Russell, Scott, Kingsley, Nirmalaraj, Nine, Smuts, John, Baker, Veronica, Crawford, Albert, Bautista, Roberto, Mirasol, Elizabeth, Catindig, Glenda, Pamugas, Louie, Tirador, Maribel, Tanque, Janusz, Gumprecht, Piotr, Napora, Edward, Franek, Andrzej, Stankiewicz, Katarzyna, Landa, Agnieszka, Tiuryn-Petrulewicz, Kazimierz, Ciechanowski, Bogna, Wierusz-Wysocka, Barbara, Rewerska, Grazyna, Cieslik, Michal, Hoffmann, Michal, Nowicki, Jolanta, Krzykowska, Stanislaw, Mazur, Katarzyna, Wasilewska, Anna, Ocicka-Kozakiewicz, Ewa, Skokowska, Renata, Wnetrzak-Michalska, Jan, Ruxer, Patrycja, Butrymowicz, Katarzyna, Madziarska, Ilona, Kurnatowska, Teresa, Rusicka, Adam, Madrzejewski, Tomasz, Stompor, Jose, Guia, Amalia, Pereira, Pedro, Melo, Cristina, Roque, Francisco, Rosario, Fernando Teixeira, E Costa, Fernando, Nolasco, Edgar, Almeida, Pedro, Matos, Cesar, Esteves, Rui, Carvalho, Ilidio, Brandao, Susana, Heitor, Ana Vila Lobos, Rosa, Ballesteros, Gil, Silva, Carlos, Barreto, Ana, Silva, Natalya, Vorokhobina, Alexander, Sherenkov, Ivan, Gordeev, Olga, Semenova, Sergey, Levashov, Vyacheslav, Marasaev, Ruslan, Sardinov, Vadim, Klimontov, Vitaliy, Baranov, Nadezhda, Verlan, Albert, Galyavich, Arkadiy, Demko, Zhanna, Kobalava, Elena, Zakharova, Lyudmila, Kvitkova, Oleg, Solovev, Elena, Smolyarchuk, Larisa, Zhukova, Elena, Zhdanova, Andrey, Babkin, Galina, Nechaeva, Olga, Barbarash, Elena, Rechkova, Roman, Libis, Elena, Kosmacheva, Tatyana, Rodionova, Irina, Ipatko, Alexander, Dreval, Nina, Petunina, Elena, Chernyavskaya, Alsu, Zalevskaya, Yuriy, Khalimov, Tatyana, Zykova, Anton, Edin, Ashot, Mkrtumyan, Shamil, Palyutin, Vyacheslav, Mareev, Leonid, Strongin, Olga, Ukhanova, Mikhail, Antsiferov, Davyd, Yakhontov, Leonid, Pimenov, Natalya, Koziolova, Konstantin, Nikolaev, Imad, Merai, Olga, Zanozina, Leyla, Gaysina, Mikhail, Arkhipov, Natalia, Malykh, Oksana, Rymar, Vladimir, Martynenko, Sofya, Malyutina, Polina, Ermakova, Marina, Kalashnikova, Bengt-Olov, Tengmark, Carl-Johan, Lindholm, Dan, Curiac, Ken, Eliasson, Erik, Rein-Hedin, Gregor, Guron, Inga, Soveri, Annette, Bruchfeld, Jonas, Spaak, Malin, Frank, Magnus, Löndahl, Hans, Larnefeldt, Margareta, Hellgren, Olof, Hellberg, Yong Mong Bee, Chee Fang Sum, Ru San Tan, Piyamitr, Sritara, Chaicharn, Deerochanawong, Chatlert, Pongchaiyakul, Natapong, Kosachunhanan, Bancha, Satirapoj, Ahmet, Temizhan, Ibrahim, Gul, Ramazan, Sari, Aytekin, Oguz, Mustafa, Tigen, Huseyin, Yilmaz, Ozer, Badak, Oner, Ozdogan, Talat, Tavli, Necmi, Eren, Murat, Cayli, Sedat, Ustundag, Yavuz, Yenicerioglu, Ismail, Kocyigit, Abdulbaki, Kumbasar, Idris, Sahin, Lee-Ming, Chuang, Ju-Ying, Jiang, Chien-Te, Lee, Der-Cherng, Tarng, Shih-Te, Tu, Mai-Szu, Wu, Ming-Ju, Wu, Chiz-Tzung, Chang, Cheng-Chieh, Hung, Liubov, Sokolova, Borys, Mankovsky, Dmytro, Kogut, Viktoriia, Chernikova, Kateryna, Malyar, Nonna, Kravchun, Volodymyr, Botsyurko, Vitaliy, Maslyanko, Liliya, Martynyuk, Oleksandr, Serhiyenko, Vasyl, Stryzhak, Halyna, Myshanych, Oleksandra, Donets, Iryna, Bondarets, Maryna, Vlasenko, Nataliia, Pertseva, Mariia, Grachova, Ivan, Smirnov, Larysa, Pererva, Ivan, Fushtey, Julia, Komisarenko, Anna, Isayeva, Carl, Meisner, Bobby, Khan, Louis, Maletz, Bradley, Dixon, Ahmed, Arif, Timothy, Jackson, Mirela, Ponduchi, Mahfouz El Shahawy, Salil, Nadkarni, Daniel, Urbach, Jorge, Paoli-Bruno, Henry, Lora, Umar, Farooq, Steven, Zeig, Lance, Rudolph, Nabil, Andrawis, William, Kaye, Jill, Meyer, Khalid, Bashir, Glenn, Heigerick, James, Smelser, Javier Ricardo Colomar, David, Scott, Brian, First, Stuart, Handelsman, Jose, Bautista, Rajesh, Patel, Stephen, Minton, Juan, Frias, Luis, Ramos-Gonez, John, Bertsch, Ali, Iranmanesh, Vivian, Fonseca, Michael, Yuryev, Larry, Popeil, Jose, Cardona, Sanjeev, Saxena, Santosh, Sharma, Edgar, Gonzalez, Richard, Solomon, Muhammad, Khan, Ahmed, Awad, David, Fitz-Patrick, Douglas, Linfert, David, Grant, Susan, Brian, Leon, Fogelfeld, Rafael, Canadas, Pablo, Pergola, Joseph, Soufer, Rakesh, Patel, Shujauddin, Valika, Jonathan, Winston, Allison, D, Maria, Caramori, Stanley, Koch, Anjay, Rastogi, Jonathan, Bornfreund, Michael, Rocco, Maxine, Hamilton, Luis, Garcia-Mayol, Peter, Weissman, Suzanne, Oparil, Gary, Ruoff, Kyaw, Soe, Gary, Korff, Robert, Busch, Alexander, Lurie, Israel, Hartman, Garfield, Samuels, Derek, Lejeune, Visal, Numrungroad, Stephen, Brietzke, Zeid, Kayali, Harold, Szerlip, Steven, Barag, Gilberto, Seco, Damaris, Vega, Osvaldo, Brusco, Camil, Kreit, Humberto, Cruz, Bharat, Mocherla, Sharma, Prabhakar, George, Fadda, Martin, Valdes, Eugene, Soroka, Ramin, Berenji, Sreedhara, Alla, Shweta, Bansal, Odugbesan, A, Karlton, Pettis, Masoud, Azizad, Idalia, Acosta, Atoya, Adams, William, Sanchez, Rosa, Suarez, Efrain, Reisin, Carlos, Herrera, Keung, Lee, Csaba, Kovesdy, Adam, Whaley-Connell, Aldo, Peixoto, Ronald, Mayfield, Mahendra, Jain, Earl, Martin, Paul, Norwood, Jonathan, Wise, Hugo, Romeu, Stephen, Halpern, Mustafa, Mandviwala, Thomas, Turk, Anna, Burgner, David, Bleich, Ankur, Doshi, Jose, Carpio, Jorge, Posada, Alexander, Magno, Samer, Nakhle, Gary, Goldstein, Caroline, Mbogua, Dierdre, Mcmullen, Dilawar, Ajani, Wayne, Kotzker, Nelson, Kopyt, Richard, Treger, Yusuf, Ruhullah, Sharon, Adler, Harjeet, Brar, Marc, Rendell, Dennis, Ross, Srinivasan, Beddhu, German, Hernandez, Sylvia, Rosas, M Sue Kirkman, Mohammed, El-Shahawy, Jeffrey, Rothman, Ahmad, Barakzoy, Aparna, Tamirisa, Sabrina, Benjamin, Michael, Bahrami, Prabir, Roy-Chaudhury, Ramprasad, Dandillaya, Gretel, Trullenque, Jose, Birriel, John, Flack, Karen, Johnson, Brenda, Lemus, Guillermo, Umpierrez, Geetha, Maddukuri, Kenneth, Jamerson, Christopher, Case, Patrick, Fluck, Saeed, Kronfli, Violet, Habwe, Bala, Subramanian, Tariq, Shafi, Rupesh, Raina, Roland, Fernando, Sourabh, Kharait, Carlos, Hernandez-Cassis, Raymond, Fink, Jamal, Hammoud, Amer, Al-Karadsheh, Manuel, Montero, Philip, Nicol, Jesus, Navarro, Michael, Shanik, Zia, Din, Francisco, Gonzalez-Abreu, Sam, Lerman, Claude, Galphin, John, Evans, Ashwini, Gore, Radica, Alicic, Mandeep, Sahani, Roberto, Pisoni, Tuan-Huy, Tran, Jeffrey, Ryu, Harvey, Serota, Nilda, Neyra, Richard, O Donovan, Sreedhar, Mandayam, Moustafa, Moustafa, Mark, Smith, Arvind, Krishna, Arjun, Sinha, Anuj, Bhargava, Kodangudi, Ramanathan, Soni, Dhanireddy, Stephen, Thomson, Romanita, Nica, Emaad, Abdel-Rahman, Mark, Barney, Mariana, Markell, Nauman, Shahid, David, Oliver, Tran, Khanh, Pham Nguyen Son, Lam VAN Hoang, Boi Ngoc Nguyen, Nguyen Minh Nui, Lan Phuong Tran, Fayzal, Ahmed, Dorothea, Urbach, Dirkie Jansen van Rensburg, Gracjan, Podgorski, Aslam, Amod, Sindeep, Bhana, Shaifali, Joshi, Essack, Mitha, Deepak, Lakha, Louis van Zyl, Trokis, J, Naresh, Ranjith, Mary, Seeber, Mohamed, Sarvan, Mohammed, Tayob, Brian, Rayner, Larry, Distiller, Heidi, Siebert, Mukesh, Joshi, Paul, Rheeder, Magdalena Madero Rovalo, Gustavo Solache Ortiz, Gustavo Méndez Machado, Rafael Valdez Ortiz, Juan Villagordoa Mesa, Saúl Irizar Santana, Sandro Avila Pardo, Jorge Escobedo de la Peña, Guillermo González Gálvez, Leobardo Sauque Reyna, Miriam Bastidas Adrian, Guillermo Fanghänel Salmón, Ramiro Gutiérrez Ochoa, Luis Nevarez Ruiz, Gabriel Ramos López, Alfredo Chew Wong, Arturo Saldaña Mendoza, Pedro García Hernández, José González González, Melchor Alpizar Salazar, José Lazcano Soto, Amaury, Roman-Miranda, Gregorio, Cortes-Maisonet, Liana, Turcu, Adriana, Dumitrescu, Gabriela, Radulian, Hortensia, Barbonta, Cristina, Mistodie, Georgeta, Vacaru, Alexandrina, Popescu, Adrian, Vlad, Silvia, Paveliu, Nicoleta, Mindrescu, Adrian, Albota, Ella, Pintilei, Lavinia, Pop, Gabriela, Negrisanu, Doina, Catrinoiu, Cornelia, Bala, Amorin, Popa, Iosif, Szilagyi, Ciprian, Constantin, Elena, Caceaune, Adriana, Onaca, Li Yuan Lee, Nor Azizah Aziz, Wan Mohd Izani Wan Mohamed, Wan Hasnul Halimi Bin Wan Hasan, Jeyakantha, Ratnasingam, Nik Nur Fatnoon Nik Ahmad, Rizmy Najme Khir, Norhaliza Mohd Ali, Masni, Mohamad, Chek Loong Loh, Joe, Eustace, John, Holian, Donal, Reddan, Yvonne, O Meara, Mensud, Hatunic, Zuzana, Ochodnicka, Dalibor, Sosovec, Andrej, Dzupina, Ingrid, Buganova, Jana, Babikova, Denisa, Spodniakova, Ruilope, L, Agarwal, R, Anker, S, Bakris, G, Filippatos, G, Nowack, C, Kolkhof, P, Joseph, A, Mentenich, N, Pitt, B, Trevisan, R, Pathology/molecular and cellular medicine, Diabetes Pathology & Therapy, and Diabetes Clinic
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Male ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Enfermedad cardiovascular ,030232 urology & nephrology ,BAY 94-8862 ,Type 2 diabetes ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Diabete ,Kidney ,Aparato circulatorio ,Azúcar ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mineralocorticoid Receptor Antagonists/therapeutic use ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Diabetic Nephropathies ,Myocardial infarction ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,Aldosterone ,Outcome ,Mineralocorticoid Receptor Antagonists ,RISK ,COMPLICATIONS ,Diabetes ,Middle Aged ,SPIRONOLACTONE ,CHRONIC HEART-FAILURE ,Treatment Outcome ,Mineralocorticoid ,Nephrology ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Research Design ,Disease Progression ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Type 2 ,Glomerular Filtration Rate ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Finerenone ,Naphthyridines/therapeutic use ,Renal function ,Outcomes ,03 medical and health sciences ,Clinical ,Double-Blind Method ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Humans ,Naphthyridines ,Renal Insufficiency, Chronic ,ANTAGONIST ,Sistema cardiovascular ,Aged ,Patient-Oriented, Translational Research: Research Article ,Diabetic Nephropathies/complications ,Renal Insufficiency, Chronic/drug therapy ,RECEPTOR ,Aldosterone, Clinical, Diabetes, Kidney, Mineralocorticoid, Outcomes ,business.industry ,Cardiovascular Diseases/epidemiology ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/complications ,MILD ,WORSENING RENAL-FUNCTION ,EFFICACY ,medicine.disease ,chemistry ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Spironolactone ,Albuminuria ,business ,Kidney disease ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Background: Among people with diabetes, those with kidney disease have exceptionally high rates of cardiovascular (CV) morbidity and mortality and progression of their underlying kidney disease. Finerenone is a novel, nonsteroidal, selective mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist that has shown to reduce albuminuria in type 2 diabetes (T2D) patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) while revealing only a low risk of hyperkalemia. However, the effect of finerenone on CV and renal outcomes has not yet been investigated in long-term trials. Patients and Methods: The Finerenone in Reducing CV Mortality and Morbidity in Diabetic Kidney Disease (FIGARO-DKD) trial aims to assess the efficacy and safety of finerenone compared to placebo at reducing clinically important CV and renal outcomes in T2D patients with CKD. FIGARO-DKD is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, event-driven trial running in 47 countries with an expected duration of approximately 6 years. FIGARO-DKD randomized 7,437 patients with an estimated glomerular filtration rate ≥25 mL/min/1.73 m2 and albuminuria (urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio ≥30 to ≤5,000 mg/g). The study has at least 90% power to detect a 20% reduction in the risk of the primary outcome (overall two-sided significance level α = 0.05), the composite of time to first occurrence of CV death, nonfatal myocardial infarction, nonfatal stroke, or hospitalization for heart failure. Conclusions: FIGARO-DKD will determine whether an optimally treated cohort of T2D patients with CKD at high risk of CV and renal events will experience cardiorenal benefits with the addition of finerenone to their treatment regimen. Trial Registration: EudraCT number: 2015-000950-39; ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02545049.
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- 2019
8. Low-Sodium Versus Standard-Sodium Peritoneal Dialysis Solution in Hypertensive Patients: A Randomized Controlled Trial
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Andreas Vychytil, Marian Klinger, Władysław Sułowicz, A. Vychytil, Bolesław Rutkowski, Michał Nowicki, Adelheid Gauly, Frank M. van der Sande, Andrzej Książek, P. Tam, Władysław Grzeszczak, B. Rutkowski, C.J.A.M. Konings, F.M. van der Sande, Louis-Jean Vleming, Paul Tam, G. Kopriva, Pieter L. Rensma, Rainer Himmele, V. Schwenger, Vedat Schwenger, D. Ouimet, M. van Buren, Małgorzata Myśliwiec, Interne Geneeskunde, MUMC+: MA Nefrologie (9), RS: FHML non-thematic output, and RS: CARIM - R3.02 - Hypertension and target organ damage
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030232 urology & nephrology ,BLOOD-PRESSURE ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,hypertension control ,Peritoneal dialysis (PD) ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,REMOVAL ,Peritoneal Dialysis, Continuous Ambulatory ,Medicine ,Dialysis adequacy ,dialysis adequacy ,SALT ,blood pressure ,sodium balance ,Middle Aged ,Kt/V ,FLUID ,Tolerability ,Nephrology ,Hypertension ,low-sodium dialysis solution ,Female ,double-blind ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Sodium ,Urology ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Renal function ,CAPD PATIENTS ,Peritoneal dialysis ,03 medical and health sciences ,randomized controlled trial (RCT) ,Double-Blind Method ,PD solution ,Humans ,KINETICS ,Antihypertensive Agents ,Aged ,business.industry ,MORTALITY ,Osmolar Concentration ,dialysis dose ,TRANSPORT ,Hemodialysis Solutions ,Surgery ,renal replacement therapy (RRT) ,chemistry ,Urea ,Kidney Failure, Chronic ,NA ,business ,Low sodium ,sodium elimination - Abstract
Background: Peritoneal dialysis (PD) solutions with reduced sodium content may have advantages for hypertensive patients; however, they have lower osmolarity and solvent drag, so the achieved Kt/V-urea may be lower. Furthermore, the increased transperitoneal membrane sodium gradient can influence sodium balance with consequences for blood pressure (BP) control.Study Design: Prospective, randomized, double-blind clinical trial to prove the noninferiority of total weekly Kt/V-urea with low-sodium versus standard-sodium PD solution, with the lower confidence limit above the clinically accepted difference of 0.5. Setting & Participants: Hypertensive patients (1 antihypertensive drug, including diuretics, or office systolic BP 130 mm Hg) on continuous ambulatory PD therapy from 17 sites.Intervention: 108 patients were randomly assigned (1:1) to 6-month treatments with either low-sodium (125 mmol/L of sodium; 1.5%, 2.3%, or 4.25% glucose; osmolarity, 338-491 mOsm/L) or standard-sodium (134 mmol/L of sodium; 1.5%, 2.3%, or 4.25% glucose; osmolarity, 356-509 mOsm/L) PD solution.Outcomes: Primary end point: weekly total KtNurea; secondary outcomes: BP control, safety, and tolerability. Measurements: Total KtNurea was determined from 24-hour dialysate and urine collection; BP, by office measurement.Results: Total Kt/Vurea after 12 weeks was 2.53 +/- 0.89 in the low -sodium group (n = 40) and 2.97 +/- 1.58 in the control group (n = 42). The noninferiority of total KtNurea could not be confirmed. There was no difference for peritoneal KtNurea (1.70 +/- 0.38 with low sodium, 1.77 +/- 0.44 with standard sodium), but there was a difference in renal KtNurea (0.83 +/- 0.80 with low sodium, 1.20 +/- 1.54 with standard sodium). Mean daily sodium removal with dialysate at week 12 was 1.188 g higher in the low-sodium group (P Limitations: Broader variability of study population than anticipated, particularly regarding residual kidney function.Conclusions: The noninferiority of the low -sodium PD solution for total Kt/Vurea could not be proved; however, it showed beneficial clinical effects on sodium removal and BP. Am J Kidney Dis. 67(5):753-761. 2016 Fresenius Medical Care. Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of the National Kidney Foundation, Inc. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.orgIlicenses/by-nc-nd14.01).
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- 2016
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9. Beverage Consumption Patterns at Age 13 to 17 Years Are Associated with Weight, Height, and Body Mass Index at Age 17 Years
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Teresa A. Marshall, John M. Van Buren, Joseph E. Cavanaugh, Steven M. Levy, and John J. Warren
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Adolescent ,Cross-sectional study ,Mothers ,Diet Surveys ,Article ,Body Mass Index ,Beverages ,03 medical and health sciences ,Food Preferences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Sex Factors ,Dietary Sucrose ,Linear regression ,Food choice ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Longitudinal Studies ,Obesity ,Beverage consumption ,030109 nutrition & dietetics ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,business.industry ,Body Weight ,General Medicine ,Feeding Behavior ,Anthropometry ,medicine.disease ,Iowa ,Body Height ,Diet ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Milk ,Fruit ,Income ,Female ,Analysis of variance ,business ,Body mass index ,Food Science ,Demography - Abstract
Background Sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) have been associated with obesity in children and adults; however, associations between beverage patterns and obesity are not understood. Objective Our aim was to describe beverage patterns during adolescence and associations between adolescent beverage patterns and anthropometric measures at age 17 years. Design We conducted a cross-sectional analyses of longitudinally collected data. Participants/setting Data from participants in the longitudinal Iowa Fluoride Study having at least one beverage questionnaire completed between ages 13.0 and 14.0 years, having a second questionnaire completed between 16.0 and 17.0 years, and attending clinic examination for weight and height measurements at age 17 years (n=369) were included. Exposure Beverages were collapsed into four categories (ie, 100% juice, milk, water and other sugar-free beverages, and SSBs) for the purpose of clustering. Five beverage clusters were identified from standardized age 13 to 17 years mean daily beverage intakes and named by the authors for the dominant beverage: juice, milk, water/sugar-free beverages, neutral, and SSB. Outcomes Weight, height, and body mass index (BMI; calculated as kg/m 2 ) at age 17 years were analyzed. Statistical analyses We used Ward's method for clustering of beverage variables, one-way analysis of variance and χ 2 tests for bivariable associations, and γ-regression for associations of weight or BMI (outcomes) with beverage clusters and demographic variables. Linear regression was used for associations of height (outcome) with beverage clusters and demographic variables. Results Participants with family incomes P =0.070) and were heavier (2.0±0.7 BMI units; P =0.002) than participants with family incomes ≥$60,000/year. Adjusted mean weight, height, and BMI estimates differed by beverage cluster membership. For example, on average, male and female members of the neutral cluster were 4.5 cm ( P =0.010) and 4.2 cm ( P =0.034) shorter, respectively, than members of the milk cluster. For members of the juice cluster, mean BMI was lower than for members of the milk cluster (by 2.4 units), water/sugar-free beverage cluster (3.5 units), neutral cluster (2.2 units), and SSB cluster (3.2 units) (all P Conclusions Beverage patterns at ages 13 to 17 years were associated with anthropometric measures and BMI at age 17 years in this sample. Beverage patterns might be characteristic of overall food choices and dietary behaviors that influence growth.
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- 2016
10. Longitudinal Predictors of Aided Speech Audibility in Infants and Children
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Lenore Holte, Mary Pat Moeller, Patricia A. Roush, Jacob Oleson, Elizabeth A. Walker, Meredith Spratford, John M. Van Buren, Ruth A. Bentler, and Ryan W. McCreery
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Speech perception ,Hearing loss ,Audiology ,Intelligibility (communication) ,Language Development ,Severity of Illness Index ,Article ,Hearing Loss, Bilateral ,Speech and Hearing ,Hearing Aids ,Risk Factors ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Cluster Analysis ,Humans ,Early childhood ,Longitudinal Studies ,Child ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Behavioral methods ,Speech Intelligibility ,Infant ,Developmentally Appropriate Practice ,Language development ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Case-Control Studies ,Child, Preschool ,Speech Perception ,Audiometry, Pure-Tone ,Female ,Audiometry ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
OBJECTIVES Amplification is a core component of early intervention for children who are hard of hearing, but hearing aids (HAs) have unique effects that may be independent from other components of the early intervention process, such as caregiver training or speech and language intervention. The specific effects of amplification are rarely described in studies of developmental outcomes. The primary purpose of this article is to quantify aided speech audibility during the early childhood years and examine the factors that influence audibility with amplification for children in the Outcomes of Children with Hearing Loss study. DESIGN Participants were 288 children with permanent hearing loss who were followed as part of the Outcomes of Children with Hearing Loss study. All of the children in this analysis had bilateral hearing loss and wore air-conduction behind-the-ear HAs. At every study visit, hearing thresholds were measured using developmentally appropriate behavioral methods. Data were obtained for a total of 1043 audiometric evaluations across all subjects for the first four study visits. In addition, the aided audibility of speech through the HA was assessed using probe microphone measures. Hearing thresholds and aided audibility were analyzed. Repeated-measures analyses of variance were conducted to determine whether patterns of thresholds and aided audibility were significantly different between ears (left versus right) or across the first four study visits. Furthermore, a cluster analysis was performed based on the aided audibility at entry into the study, aided audibility at the child's final visit, and change in aided audibility between these two intervals to determine whether there were different patterns of longitudinal aided audibility within the sample. RESULTS Eighty-four percent of children in the study had stable audiometric thresholds during the study, defined as threshold changes
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- 2016
11. Trends and Predictors of Longitudinal Hearing Aid Use for Children who are Hard of Hearing
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Elizabeth A. Walker, Patricia A. Roush, Meredith Spratford, Mary Pat Moeller, Ryan W. McCreery, Jacob Oleson, John M. Van Buren, and Ruth A. Bentler
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Hearing aid ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hearing loss ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Audiology ,Severity of Illness Index ,Article ,Hearing Loss, Bilateral ,Speech and Hearing ,Hearing Aids ,Age groups ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Severity of illness ,medicine ,Humans ,Active listening ,Longitudinal Studies ,Child ,School age child ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Infant ,medicine.disease ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Child, Preschool ,Audiometry, Pure-Tone ,Educational Status ,Patient Compliance ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Audiometry ,business - Abstract
Objectives: Children who are hard of hearing (CHH) have restricted access to acoustic and linguistic information. Increased audibility provided by hearing aids (HAs) influences language outcomes, but the advantages of appropriately fit HAs can only be realized if children wear their devices on a consistent basis. The purpose of this article was to characterize long-term HA use in CHH, based on parent-report measures, and identify factors that influence longitudinal trends in HA use. Design: Participants were parents of 290 children with mild to severe hearing loss. At every visit, parents estimated the average amount of time the child used HAs per day during the week and on the weekends. Parent reports of daily HA use were analyzed to determine if different patterns of HA use were observed longitudinally during the study. Independent predictor variables were then related to longitudinal trends in HA use within three age groups (infant, preschool, school age). Results: On average across multiple visits, parents reported that their children wore their HAs for 10.63 hr per day (SD = 3.29). Data logging values were lower than parent-report measures (M = 8.44, SD = 4.06), suggesting that parents overestimated daily HA use. The majority of children in each age group wore HAs at least 8 hr per day from their first research testing interval to their last, based on parent-report measures. Maternal education level predicted longitudinal trends in HA use for infants and school-age CHH. Degree of hearing loss was related to trends in school-age children only. Conclusions: These results indicated that the majority of CHH increased HA use over time, but a sizable minority demonstrated a low level of use or decreased use in the time period studied. Maternal education level influenced longitudinal trends in daily HA use. Degree of hearing loss influenced trends in school-age children only. Audiologists and early intervention service providers might aid in improving HA use by providing regular hands-on training with the HAs and individualized problem-based strategies to address the challenges families experience with attaining a high level of use. Families may also benefit from practical demonstrations of the benefits of consistent HA use, such as hearing loss simulations, examples of listening in noise with and without HAs, or listening to malfunctioning HAs.
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- 2015
12. Randomised trial of no hydration vs. sodium bicarbonate hydration in patients with chronic kidney disease undergoing acute computed tomography-pulmonary angiography
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S. R. S. Ramai, C. J. Van Rooden, J. H. M. Groeneveld, Yvo W. J. Sijpkens, A. J. van der Molen, Judith Kooiman, Ton J. Rabelink, M. van Buren, Menno V. Huisman, Suzanne C. Cannegieter, Hein Putter, and Nico J Aarts
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,pulmonary embolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,Contrast Media ,Renal function ,prevention & control ,multidetector computed tomography ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine ,Humans ,education ,Lung ,Dialysis ,Aged ,Creatinine ,education.field_of_study ,Sodium bicarbonate ,business.industry ,Angiography ,Acute kidney injury ,Water ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Pulmonary embolism ,Sodium Bicarbonate ,Treatment Outcome ,chemistry ,acute kidney injury ,Anesthesia ,randomized controlled trial ,Fluid Therapy ,Kidney Failure, Chronic ,Female ,venous thrombosis ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Kidney disease - Abstract
Summary Background Hydration to prevent contrast-induced acute kidney injury (CI-AKI) induces a diagnostic delay when performing computed tomography–pulmonary angiography (CTPA) in patients suspected of having acute pulmonary embolism. Aim To analyze whether withholding hydration is non-inferior to sodium bicarbonate hydration before CTPA in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Methods We performed an open-label multicenter randomized trial between 2009 and 2013. One hundred thirty-nine CKD patients were randomized, of whom 138 were included in the intention-to-treat population: 67 were randomized to withholding hydration and 71 were randomized to 1-h 250 mL 1.4% sodium bicarbonate hydration before CTPA. Primary outcome was the increase in serum creatinine 48–96 h after CTPA. Secondary outcomes were the incidence of CI-AKI (creatinine increase > 25%/> 0.5 mg dL−1), recovery of renal function, and the need for dialysis within 2 months after CTPA. Withholding hydration was considered non-inferior if the mean relative creatinine increase was ≤ 15% compared with sodium bicarbonate. Results Mean relative creatinine increase was −0.14% (interquartile range −15.1% to 12.0%) for withholding hydration and −0.32% (interquartile range −9.7% to 10.1%) for sodium bicarbonate (mean difference 0.19%, 95% confidence interval −5.88% to 6.25%, P-value non-inferiority
- Published
- 2014
13. Patients' representations of their end-stage renal disease: relation with mortality
- Author
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Sandra, van Dijk, Margreet, Scharloo, Adrian A, Kaptein, Melissa S Y, Thong, Elisabeth W, Boeschoten, Diana C, Grootendorst, Raymond T, Krediet, Friedo W, Dekker, A J, Apperloo, J A, Bijlsma, M, Boekhout, W H, Boer, P J M, van der Boog, H R, Büller, M, van Buren, F Th, de Charro, C J, Doorenbos, M A, van den Dorpel, A, van Es, W J, Fagel, G W, Feith, C W H, de Fijter, L A M, Frenken, J A C A, van Geelen, P G G, Gerlag, W, Grave, J P M C, Gorgels, R M, Huisman, K J, Jager, K, Jie, W A H, Koning-Mulder, M I, Koolen, T K Kremer, Hovinga, A T J, Lavrijssen, A J, Luik, J, van der Meulen, K J, Parlevliet, M H M, Raasveld, F M, van der Sande, M J M, Schonck, M M J, Schuurmans, C E H, Siegert, C A, Stegeman, P, Stevens, J G P, Thijssen, R M, Valentijn, G H, Vastenburg, C A, Verburgh, H H, Vincent, P F, Vos, Translational Immunology Groningen (TRIGR), Groningen Kidney Center (GKC), Medical Psychology, Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences, Nephrology, Vascular Medicine, Amsterdam Public Health, Medical Informatics, and Cardiothoracic Surgery
- Subjects
Male ,self-regulation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,PERCEPTIONS ,medicine.medical_treatment ,media_common.quotation_subject ,HEMODIALYSIS-PATIENTS ,Disease ,End stage renal disease ,Quality of life ,QUALITY-OF-LIFE ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,DIALYSIS ,medicine ,Humans ,adherence ,Intensive care medicine ,Aged ,media_common ,illness perceptions ,Transplantation ,end-stage renal disease ,ILLNESS REPRESENTATIONS ,Self-management ,business.industry ,Mortality rate ,Self-control ,medicine.disease ,mortality ,MODEL ,Nephrology ,Kidney Failure, Chronic ,Female ,HEALTH ,Hemodialysis ,business ,Demography ,Kidney disease - Abstract
Background. Self-regulation theory explains how patients' illness perceptions influence self-management behaviour (e. g. via adherence to treatment). Following these assumptions, we explored whether illness perceptions of ESRD-patients are related to mortality rates.Methods. Illness perceptions of 182 patients participating in the NECOSAD-2 study in the period between December 2004 and June 2005 were assessed. Cox proportional hazard models were used to estimate whether subsequent all-cause mortality could be attributed to illness perception dimensions.Results. One-third of the participants had died at the end of the follow-up. Mortality rates were higher among patients who believed that their treatment was less effective in controlling their disease (perceived treatment control; RR = 0.71, P = 0.028). This effect remained stable after adjusting for sociodemographic and clinical variables (RR = 0.65, P = 0.015).Conclusions. If we consider risk factors for mortality, we tend to rely on clinical parameters rather than on patients' representations of their illness. Nevertheless, results from the current exploration may suggest that addressing patients' personal beliefs regarding the effectiveness of treatment can provide a powerful tool for predicting and perhaps even enhancing survival.
- Published
- 2009
14. Nurse practitioners improve quality of care in chronic kidney disease: two-year results of a randomised study
- Author
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A D, van Zuilen, P J, Blankestijn, M, van Buren, M A G J, ten Dam, K A H, Kaasjager, G, Ligtenberg, Y W J, Sijpkens, H E, Sluiter, P J G, van de Ven, G, Vervoort, L, Vleming, M L, Bots, and J F M, Wetzels
- Subjects
Male ,Middle Aged ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Risk Factors ,Humans ,Kidney Failure, Chronic ,Female ,Nurse Practitioners ,Smoking Cessation ,Risk Reduction Behavior ,Antihypertensive Agents ,Glomerular Filtration Rate ,Hypolipidemic Agents ,Netherlands ,Quality of Health Care - Abstract
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is associated with increased cardiovascular risk. Here we evaluate whether strict implementation of guidelines aimed at multiple targets with the aid of nurse practitioners (NP) improves management in patients with CKD.MASTER PLAN is a randomised controlled clinical trial, performed in nine Dutch hospitals. Patients with CKD (estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) 20-70 ml÷min) were randomised to receive NP support (intervention group (IG)) or physician care (control group (CG)). Patients were followed for a median of five years. Presented data are an interim analysis on risk factor control at two-year follow-up.We included 788 patients (532 M, 256 F), (393 CG, 395 IG), mean (±SD ) age 59 (±13) years, eGFR 38 (±15) ml÷min÷1.73m(2), blood pressure (BP) 138 (±21)÷80 (±11) mmHg. At two years 698 patients (352 IG, 346 CG) could be analysed. IG as compared with CG had lower systolic (133 vs 135 mmHgsemi; p= 0.04) and diastolic BP (77 vs 80 mmHgsemi; p=0.007), LDL cholesterol (2.30 vs 2.45 mmol(-l); p= 0.03), and increased use of ACE inhibitors, statins, aspirin and vitamin D. The intervention had no effect on smoking cessation, body weight, physical activity or sodium excretion.In both groups, risk factor management improved. However, changes in BP control, lipid management and medication use were more pronounced in IG than in CG. Lifestyle interventions were not effective. Coaching by NPs thus benefits everyday care of CKD patients. Whether these changes translate into improvement in clinical endpoints remains to be established.
- Published
- 2011
15. Hospital specific factors affect quality of blood pressure treatment in chronic kidney disease
- Author
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A D, van Zuilen, P J, Blankestijn, M, van Buren, M A G J, Ten Dam, K A H, Kaasjager, G, Ligtenberg, Y W J, Sijpkens, H E, Sluiter, P J G, van de Ven, G, Vervoort, L, Vleming, M L, Bots, and J F M, Wetzels
- Subjects
Male ,Oscillometry ,Hypertension ,Multivariate Analysis ,Linear Models ,Humans ,Kidney Failure, Chronic ,Blood Pressure ,Female ,Middle Aged ,Antihypertensive Agents ,Hospitals - Abstract
Blood pressure (BP) is the most important modifiable risk factor for cardiovascular (CV) disease and progression of kidney dysfunction in patients with chronic kidney disease. Despite extensive antihypertensive treatment possibilities, adequate control is notoriously hard to achieve. Several determinants have been identified which affect BP control. In the current analysis we evaluated differences in achieved BP and achievement of the BP goal between hospitals and explored possible explanations.At baseline, BP was measured in a supine position with an oscillometric device in 788 patients participating in the MASTER PLAN study. We also retrieved the last measured office BP from the patient records. Additional baseline characteristics were derived from the study database. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed with general linear modelling using hospital as a random factor.In univariate analysis, hospital was a determinant of the level of systolic and diastolic BP at baseline. Adjustment for patient, kidney disease, treatment or hospital characteristics affected the relation. Yet, in a fully adjusted model, differences between centres persisted with a range of 15 mmHg for systolic BP and 11 mmHg for diastolic BP.Despite extensive adjustments, a clinically relevant, statistically significant difference between hospitals was found in standardised BP measurements at baseline of a randomised controlled study. We hypothesise that differences in the approach towards BP control exist at the physician level and that these explain the differences between hospitals.
- Published
- 2011
16. Natriuretic and hypotensive effect of adenosine-1 blockade in essential hypertension
- Author
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H. J. M. Van Rijn, Peter Boer, Hendrik A. Koomans, J A Bijlsma, M. van Buren, and Other departments
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Purinergic Antagonists ,Pyridines ,Hemodynamics ,Blood Pressure ,Essential hypertension ,Natriuresis ,Renal Circulation ,Excretion ,Lithium Carbonate ,Heart Rate ,Internal medicine ,Renin ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Cyclic AMP ,Humans ,Aldosterone ,business.industry ,Reabsorption ,Sodium ,Inulin ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Free water clearance ,Endocrinology ,Blood pressure ,Decreased blood pressure ,Hypertension ,Potassium ,Pyrazoles ,p-Aminohippuric Acid ,business ,Glomerular Filtration Rate - Abstract
We studied the effects of a single dose (100 mg orally) and repeated administration (100 mg o.d. for 7 days) of FK453, a novel adenosine-1 receptor antagonist, on renal sodium handling and blood pressure in eight patients with essential hypertension. Within 60 minutes after administration of FK453, sodium excretion increased threefold. This occurred in the absence of a change in renal hemodynamics, assessed from inulin and para-aminohippurate clearance, and was accompanied by increased fractional excretion of lithium, phosphate, and uric acid and by increased excretion of calcium and magnesium. Maximal free water clearance data showed an increase in maximal urine flow and distal delivery term and a decrease in the diluting segment reabsorption term. FK453 also decreased blood pressure and increased heart rate, but this did not occur until about 3 hours after ingestion, that is, when the natriuresis was already over. The natriuretic effect of FK453 was short-lasting, and continued use of FK453 was in fact accompanied by some net sodium retention. Blood pressure on the seventh day before FK453 treatment was not different from blood pressure before administration of the first dose of FK453. Again an acute natriuretic response followed, although less than after the first dose. Changes in intrarenal sodium handling parameters, blood pressure, and heart rate were similar to those seen after the first dose. The natriuretic and hypotensive effects of FK453 indicate that adenosine-1 receptor activity plays a role in the regulation of blood pressure and renal sodium handling in patients with essential hypertension.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1993
17. Clinical impact of HLA class I expression in rectal cancer
- Author
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Frank M. Speetjens, Monique van Velzen, Eliane C. M. Zeestraten, N. Geeske Dekker-Ensink, Elza C. de Bruin, J. Han van Krieken, Hans Morreau, Peter J. K. Kuppen, Maaike M. van Buren, Cornelis J.H. van de Velde, and Hein Putter
- Subjects
Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Age-related aspects of cancer [ONCOL 2] ,Genetics and epigenetic pathways of disease [NCMLS 6] ,Colorectal cancer ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunology ,Human leukocyte antigen ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Disease-Free Survival ,Translational research [ONCOL 3] ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Immunology and Allergy ,Humans ,Rectal cancer ,Molecular diagnosis, prognosis and monitoring [UMCN 1.2] ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,biology ,Hereditary cancer and cancer-related syndromes [ONCOL 1] ,business.industry ,Rectal Neoplasms ,Histocompatibility Antigens Class I ,Cancer ,Microsatellite instability ,HLA class I ,Anatomical pathology ,Immunotherapy ,medicine.disease ,Prognosis ,Immunohistochemistry ,Tumor microenvironment [UMCN 1.3] ,Tissue Array Analysis ,biology.protein ,Original Article ,Microsatellite Instability ,Antibody ,business ,Immunity, infection and tissue repair [NCMLS 1] - Abstract
Contains fulltext : 69499.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access) PURPOSE: To determine the clinical impact of human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I expression in irradiated and non-irradiated rectal carcinomas. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Tumor samples in tissue micro array format were collected from 1,135 patients. HLA class I expression was assessed after immunohistochemical staining with two antibodies (HCA2 and HC10). RESULTS: Tumors were split into two groups: (1) tumors with >50% of tumor cells expressing HLA class I (high) and (2) tumors with < or =50% of tumor cells expressing HLA class I (low). No difference in distribution or prognosis of HLA class I expression was found between irradiated and non-irradiated patients. Patients with low expression of HLA class I (15% of all patients) showed an independent significantly worse prognosis with regard to overall survival and disease-free survival. HLA class I expression had no effect on cancer-specific survival or recurrence-free survival. CONCLUSIONS: Down-regulation of HLA class I in rectal cancer is associated with poor prognosis. In contrast to our results, previous reports on HLA class I expression in colorectal cancer described a large population of patients with HLA class I negative tumors, having a good prognosis. This difference might be explained by the fact that a large proportion of HLA negative colon tumors are microsatellite instable (MSI). MSI tumors are associated with a better prognosis than microsatellite stable (MSS). As rectal tumors are mainly MSS, our results suggest that it is both, oncogenic pathway and HLA class I expression, that dictates patient's prognosis in colorectal cancer. Therefore, to prevent confounding in future prognostic analysis on the impact of HLA expression in colorectal tumors, separate analysis of MSI and MSS tumors should be performed.
- Published
- 2008
18. SP365COGNITIVE AND FUNCTIONAL DECLINE IN OLDER PATIENTS WITH IMPAIRED RENAL FUNCTION PRESENTING TO THE EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT
- Author
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Ton J. Rabelink, Marije H. Kallenberg, M. van Buren, B de Groot, J A Lucke, Simon P. Mooijaart, J de Gelder, and J. Fogteloo
- Subjects
Transplantation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Impaired renal function ,Older patients ,Nephrology ,business.industry ,medicine ,Cognition ,Emergency department ,Functional decline ,Intensive care medicine ,business - Published
- 2015
19. A stony history
- Author
-
M. van Buren
- Subjects
Male ,Transplantation ,business.industry ,Urography ,Hydronephrosis ,Middle Aged ,Kidney ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Nephrocalcinosis ,Nephrology ,Renal Dialysis ,Lithotripsy ,Hyperoxaluria, Primary ,Medicine ,Humans ,Urinary Calculi ,Renal Insufficiency ,business ,Classics ,Ultrasonography - Published
- 2000
20. Insulin increases sodium reabsorption in diluting segment in humans: evidence for indirect mediation through hypokalemia
- Author
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Hendrik A. Koomans, C E Friedberg, J A Bijlsma, M van Buren, and Other departments
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Sodium ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Hypokalemia ,Sodium Chloride ,Potassium Chloride ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Insulin ,Infusions, Intravenous ,Osmole ,Renal sodium reabsorption ,Chemistry ,Reabsorption ,Free water clearance ,Endocrinology ,Kidney Tubules ,Nephrology ,Renal physiology ,medicine.symptom - Abstract
Insulin increases sodium reabsorption in diluting segment in humans: Evidence for indirect mediation through hypokalemia. To examine the mechanism of renal sodium (Na) and potassium (K) retention during insulin infusion, seven healthy volunteers underwent clearance studies without (time control) and with insulin infusion (40mU bolus, followed by 1 mU/kg/min for 150 min). Maximal free water clearance and fractional lithium clearance (FELi) were used to analyze renal sodium handling. Insulin decreased Na excretion (from 189 ± 25 to 121 ± 19 µmol/min, P < 0.01) and K excretion (from 64± 8 to 19 ± 1 µmol/min, P < 0.01), but did not change in glomerular filtration rate. FELi increased from 29.8 ± 1.9 to 32.3 ± 1.9% (P < 0.05), minimal urine osmolality decreased from 59 ± 3 to 46 ± 3 mOsm/kg (P < 0.01), and the diluting segment reabsorption index increased from 88.0 ± 0.9 to 93.7 ± 0.9%, P < 0.01). Insulin also decreased plasma K, from 3.91 ± 0.08 to 3.28 ± 0.08 mmol/liter, P < 0.01. In a third clearance study KCl was infused simultaneously (3.75 µmol/kg/min) to prevent this fall in plasma K. In this study insulin had no effect on Na and K excretion and diluting segment reabsorption, but the rise in FELi remained. In a fourth clearance study NaCl (3.75 µmol/kg/min) instead of KCl was infused together with insulin. This manoever did not prevent the Na and K retaining effect of insulin, nor any of its effects on renal sodium handling parameters. These data suggest that Na and K retention during insulin infusion are largely secondary to hypokalemia, which causes increased reabsorption in the diluting segment.
- Published
- 1991
21. Potassium Clearance and Reactive Gliosis in the Alumina Gel Lesion
- Author
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John M. Van Buren, Naomi Mutsuga, William H. Schuette, and Darrell V. Lewis
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Reactive gliosis ,Potassium ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Alumina gel ,Stimulation ,Epileptogenesis ,Lesion ,Seizures ,Aluminum Oxide ,medicine ,Animals ,Gliosis ,Electroencephalography ,Haplorhini ,Syndrome ,Macaca mulatta ,Cortex (botany) ,Neurology ,chemistry ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Aluminum - Abstract
Potassium accumulation or impaired potassium clearance has been hypothesized to contribute to epileptogenesis in gliotic epileptogenic foci. To test this hypothesis, potassium clearance rates following direct cortical stimulation were measured in the cortex of monkeys rendered epileptic by the injection of alumina gel into the motor area. Reactive gliosis at the sites in which potassium clearance was measured was then quantitated histologically and compared with potassium clearance rates. Dense gliosis was associated with slowed potassium clearance, although the base-line potassium level appeared no different in actively epileptogenic areas or gliotic areas compared with normal areas. Possible mechanisms and significance of slowed potassium clearance in the alumina focus are discussed.
- Published
- 1977
22. Anselm's Formula and the Logic of ‘God’
- Author
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Paul M. van Buren
- Subjects
Philosophy ,Phrase ,Nothing ,Argument ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Religious studies ,Verb ,Meditation ,Ontological argument ,media_common ,Epistemology - Abstract
Anselm built his meditation Proslogion on the formula ‘that than which nothing greater can be conceived’. The peculiarity of this phrase has been often remarked but not, I believe, fully appreciated. Properly understood, I shall argue, this formula, although unable to support the so-called ontological argument, throws important light on the logic of the religious use of the word ‘God’. My argument will turn on the difference between the two uses of the verb ‘conceive’ in Anselm's claim that we can conceive of that than which nothing greater can be conceived.
- Published
- 1973
23. The temporal horn: Its development, normal variations and changes associated with non-expanding epileptogenic lesions of the temporal lobe
- Author
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John M. Van Buren, Maitland Baldwin, and Ellsworth C. Alvord
- Subjects
Normal variation ,French horn ,business.industry ,Medicine ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,business ,Temporal lobe - Published
- 1956
24. Contents Vol. 35,1973
- Author
-
Takashi Nishida, William P. Wilson, Doris A. Sadowsky, Donald E. Richardson, Donna Bergen, John M. Van Buren, David S. Zorub, William G. Henderson, Harold L. Klawans, Douglas Y. Shapiro, George W. Bruyn, Dewey K. Ziegler, and Blaine S. Nashold
- Subjects
Cognitive science ,Philosophy ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neuroscience - Published
- 1973
25. Cerebral seizures of probable orbitofrontal origin
- Author
-
Cosimo Ajmone Marsan, John M. Van Buren, and Barry I. Ludwig
- Subjects
Gynecology ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Orbitofrontal epilepsy ,partial seizures ,Adolescent ,Implanted electrodes ,Electroencephalography ,Eye deviation ,medicine.disease ,Electrodes, Implanted ,Frontal Lobe ,Neurology ,Psychomotor seizures ,Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,Neurology (clinical) ,Epilepsies, Partial ,Diagnostic Errors ,Psychology ,Temporal lobe origin ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
SUMMARY Four patients with seizures of presumed temporal lobe origin are presented in whom a definite focal ictal onset in the orbitofrontal cortex was revealed during recording, either by chronically implanted electrodes or ECoG. In three cases automatisms occurred concomitantly with orbitofrontal activation without spread of paroxysmal activity into the temporal structures monitored. With eight additional cases of possible orbitofrontal epilepsy found on reviewing the literature, two subgroups emerge: (1) patients with primarily psychomotor-type fits, and (2) patients with loss of consciousness, head and eye deviation, and generalized convulsions. Scalp EEGs, in patients on whom we have available data, manifested bilaterally synchronous, paroxysmal discharges which were bifrontal, frontopolar, or maximal in one anterior quadrant, with or without evidence of additional temporal lobe involvement. On the basis of anatomic and physiological studies, as well as our own electrographic data, it is felt that a posterior orbitofrontal and temporo-limbic, or mesial orbitofrontal and parasagittal-limbic relationship exists, within which autonomous epileptogenic zones may develop, with the ability to discharge directly and independently to subcortical centers, while eliciting similar clinical patterns. RESUME On a etudie 4 malades ayant des crises supposees ďorigine temporale, dans lesquelles un debut critique focal bien precis dans le cortex orbito-frontal etait revele pendant Ľenregistrement, soit par des electrodes implantees chroniques, soit par ECoG. Dans 3 cas, des automatismes se manifestaient simultanement a une activation orbitofrontale, sans que Ľactivite paroxystique s'etende aux structures temporales enregistrees. Avec 8 cas en plus ďeventuelle epilepsie orbitofrontale, decouverts en revoyant la litterature, on peut distinguer 2 sous-groupes: (1) les malades presentant essentiellement des crises temporales (2) et les malades ayant des pertes de conscience, deviation de la tete et des yeux, et convulsions generalisees. Les enregistrements EEG chez les malades pour qui nous avons des donnees valables, montraient des decharges paroxystiques synchrones et bilaterales qui etaient bifrontales, frontopolaires ou maximum dans une region anterieure avec ou sans participation additionnelle evidente du lobe temporal. En se basant sur des etudes anatomiques, et physiologiques aussi bien que sur nos propres donnees electrographiques, on pense qu'il existe une relation entre la region orbitofrontale posterieure et temporale limbique ou orbitofrontale mesiale et limbique parasagittale, dans lesquelles des zones epileptogeniques pourraient se developer, avec la possiblite de decharges directement et independamment vers les centres subcorticaux, en provoquant des manifestations cliniques semblables. RESUMEN Se han presentado 4 pacientes con ataques de presumible origen temporal, en los que se encontro un claro comienzo focal del ataque en la corteza orbitofrontal, durante el registro mediante electrodos implantados permanentemente o electrocorticograma. En tres de estos enfermos los automatismos ocurrieron simultaneamente con activacion orbitofrontal sin propagacion de la actividad paroxistica a los lobulos temporales, tambien monitorizados. Tras el estudio de ocho casos adicionales de posible epilepsia orbito-frontal, registrados en la literatura, se pueden extraer los siguientes subgrupos: (1) enfermos que presentan, princi-palmente, ataques psicomotores, y (2) enfermos con perdida de conocimiento, rotacion de cabeza y ojos y convulsiones generalizadas. En enfermos en los que hemos recogido information, los EEGs habituates mostraron descargas paroxisticas, bilaterales y sincronas de presentation bifrontal, frontopolar o dominando en uno de los cuadrantes anteriores, con o sin evidencia de afectacion adicional de uno de los lobulos temporales. Basandose en los estudios anatomicos y fisiologicos, unidos a nuestra information electroencefalografica, es possible aceptar una relation entre las regiones orbitofrontal posterior y limbico-temporal o entre las regiones orbitofrontal medial y parasagital limbica, con capacidad epileptogenica autonoma en cada una de dichas zonas y la posibilidad de descargar directa e indepen-dientemente sobre centros subcorticales dis-tintos con manifestaciones clfnicas semejantes. jantes. ZUSAMMENFASSUNG Vier Patienten werden besprochen, bei denen Temporallappen-Anfalle vermutet wurden. Die Ableitungen mit chronisch im-plantierten Elektroden bzw. Des Elektro-corticogramms liessen eindeutig den fokalen Anfallsbeginn im orbitofrontalen Cortex erkennen. Bei drei Patienten zeigten sich Auto-matismen gleichzeitig mit der orbitofrontalen Aktivierung, ohne dass eine Ausbreitung der paroxysmalen Aktivitat in die temporalen Strukturen erkennbar war. Unter Beruck-sichtigung von 8 zusatzlichen Patienten mit vermuteter orbitofrontaler Epilepsie aus der Literatur, lassen sich zwei Untergruppen unterscheiden: (1) Patienten mit Anfallen primar vom psychomotorischen Typ und (2) Patienten mit Bewusstseinsverlust, Deviation von Kopf und Augen und generalisierten Krampfen. Soweit Oberflachen-EEGs dieser Patienten verfugbar sind, zeigen sich bilateral synchrone, paroxysmale Entladungen bifrontal, frontopolar oder mit Betonung in einem vorderen Quadranten mit oder ohne Hinweise auf zusatzliche Einbeziehung des Temporallappens. Aufgrund anatomischer und physiologischer Untersuchungen sowie unserer eigenen elektro-graphischen Daten werden hintere orbitofrontale und temporal-limbische oder mesiale orbitofrontale und parasagittal-limbische Ver-bindungen angenommen innerhalb derer auto-nome epileptogene Zonen sich entwickeln konnen. Sie haben die Fahigkeit, direkt und unabhangig nach subcortikalen Zentren sich zu entladen, und dabei ahnliche klinische Muster auszulosen.
- Published
- 1975
26. Trans-synaptic retrograde degeneration in the visual system of primates
- Author
-
J. M. Van Buren
- Subjects
Neurons ,Retina ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Retrograde Degeneration ,Research ,Neurosurgery ,Optic Nerve ,Articles ,Haplorhini ,Biology ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Synapses ,medicine ,Optic nerve ,Pathology ,Animals ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Occipital Lobe ,Occipital lobe ,Neuroscience - Published
- 1963
27. Subject Index Vol. 35,1973
- Author
-
David S. Zorub, Doris A. Sadowsky, William G. Henderson, George W. Bruyn, Takashi Nishida, Dewey K. Ziegler, Harold L. Klawans, Donald E. Richardson, William P. Wilson, John M. Van Buren, Donna Bergen, Blaine S. Nashold, and Douglas Y. Shapiro
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Index (economics) ,Mathematics education ,medicine ,Surgery ,Subject (documents) ,Medical physics ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychology - Published
- 1973
28. Affirmation of the Jewish People: a condition of theological coherence
- Author
-
Paul M. van Buren
- Subjects
Judaism ,Religious studies ,Sociology ,Coherence (statistics) ,Social psychology ,Epistemology - Published
- 1977
29. The kidney, subclinical thyroid disease and cardiovascular outcomes in older patients
- Author
-
L E Zijlstra, D M van Velzen, S Simsek, S P Mooijaart, M van Buren, D J Stott, I Ford, J W Jukema, and S Trompet
- Subjects
cardiovascular disease ,kidney function ,older patients ,thyroid function ,Diseases of the endocrine glands. Clinical endocrinology ,RC648-665 - Abstract
Objective: Thyroid hormones have been implicated to play a role in cardiovascular disease, along with studies linking thyroid hormone to kidney function. The aim of this study is to investigate whether kidney function modifies the ass ociation of subclinical thyroid dysfunction and the risk of cardiovascular outcomes. Methods: In total, 5804 patients were included in the PROspective Study of Pravastatin in the Elderly at Risk (PROSPER). For the current analysis, 426 were excluded because of overt thyroid disease at baseline or 6 months, 266 because of inconsistent thyroid function at baseline and 6 months, 294 because of medication us e that could influence thyroid function, and 16 because of missing kidney or thyroid values. Participants with normal fT4 were classified, based on TSH both at inclusion and 6 months, into three groups: subclinical hypothyroidism (TSH >4.5 mIU/L); euthyroidism (TSH = 0.45–4.5 mIU/L); and subclinical hyperthyroidism (TSH 60 mL/min/1.73 m2. The primary endpoint consists of death from coronary heart disease, non-fatal myocardial infarction and (non)fatal stroke. Results: Mean age was 75.3 years, and 49.0% patients were male. Mean follow-up was 3.2 years. Of all participants, 109 subjects (2.2%) had subclinical hypothyroidism, 4573 (94.0%) had euthyroidism, and 182 (3.7%) subclinical hyperthyroidism. For patients with subclinical hypothyroidism, euthyroidism, and subclinical hyperthyroidism, primary outcome occurred in 9 (8.3%), 712 (15.6%), and 23 (12.6%) patients, respectively. No statistically significant relationship was found between subclinical thyroid dysfunction and primary endpoint with adjusted hazard ratios of 0.51 (0.24– 1.07) comparing subclinical hyperthyroidism and 0.90 (0.58–1.39) comparing subclinical hypothyroidism with euthyroidism. Neither was this relationship present in any of the strata of kidney function, nor did kidney function interact with subclinical thyroid dysfunction in the association with primary endpoint (P interaction = 0.602 for subclinical hyperthyroidism and 0.388 for subclinical hypothyroidism). Conclusions: In this secondary analysis from PROSPER, we found no evidence that the potential association between thyroid hormones and cardiovascular disease is modified by kidney function in older patients with subclinical thyroid dysfunction.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Geriatric Assessment in CKD Care: An Implementation Study.
- Author
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Voorend CGN, Berkhout-Byrne NC, van Bodegom-Vos L, Diepenbroek A, Franssen CFM, Joosten H, Mooijaart SP, Bos WJW, and van Buren M
- Abstract
Rationale & Objective: Older people with progressive chronic kidney disease (CKD) have complex health care needs. Geriatric evaluation preceding decision making for kidney replacement is recommended in guidelines, but implementation is lacking in routine care. We aimed to evaluate implementation of geriatric assessment in CKD care., Study Design: Mixed methods implementation study., Setting & Participants: Dutch nephrology centers were approached for implementation of geriatric assessment in patients aged ≥70 years and with an estimated glomerular filtration rate of ≤20 mL/min/1.73 m
2 ., Quality Improvement Activities/exposure: We implemented a consensus-based nephrology-tailored geriatric assessment: a patient questionnaire and professionally administered test set comprising 16 instruments covering functional, cognitive, psychosocial, and somatic domains and patient-reported outcome measures., Outcomes: We aimed for implementation in 10 centers and 200 patients. Implementation was evaluated by (i) perceived enablers and barriers of implementation, including integration in work routines (Normalization Measure Development Tool) and (ii) relevance of the instruments to routine care for the target population., Analytical Approach: Variations in implementation practices were described based on field notes. The postimplementation survey among health care professionals was analyzed descriptively, using an explanatory qualitative approach for open-ended questions., Results: Geriatric assessment was implemented in 10 centers among 191 patients. Survey respondents (n = 71, 88% response rate) identified determinants that facilitated implementation, ie, multidisciplinary collaboration (with geriatricians) -meetings and reports and execution of assessments by nurses. Barriers to implementation were patient illiteracy or language barrier, time constraints, and patient burden. Professionals considered geriatric assessment sufficiently integrated into work routines (mean, 6.7/10 ± 2.0 [SD]) but also subject to improvement. Likewise, the relevance of geriatric assessment for routine care was scored as 7.8/10 ± 1.2. The Clinical Frailty Score and Montreal Cognitive Assessment were perceived as the most relevant instruments., Limitations: Selection bias of interventions' early adopters may limit generalizability., Conclusions: Geriatric assessment could successfully be integrated in CKD care and was perceived relevant to health care professionals., (© 2024 The Authors.)- Published
- 2024
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31. Decreasing incidence of dialysis in older patients in The Netherlands as compared with other European countries: an international perspective.
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van Oevelen M, Abrahams AC, Hoekstra T, Ten Dam MAGJ, Kramer A, Jager KJ, Ocak G, van Buren M, and Bos WJW
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Introduction: After decades of increasing dialysis incidence, we observed a decreasing trend in the Netherlands in the last decade. We compared this trend with trends in other European countries., Materials and Methods: Aggregated data for calendar years 2001-2019 from the Dutch registries of kidney replacement therapy patients and the European Renal Association Registry were used. Dialysis incidence in the Netherlands was compared with that in 11 other European countries/regions using three age groups: 20-64, 65-74, and ≥75 years, taking into account pre-emptive kidney transplantation (PKT) incidence. Time trends were assessed as annual percentage change (APC) with 95% confidence intervals (CI) using joinpoint regression analysis., Results: Between 2001 and 2019 the Dutch dialysis incidence decreased slightly among patients aged 20-64 years (APC -0.9, 95% CI -1.4; -0.5). For patients 65-74 and ≥75 years old, a peak was seen in 2004 and 2009, respectively. Afterwards, the decrease was most marked in patients aged ≥75 years: APC -3.2 (-4.1; -2.3) versus APC -1.8 (-2.2; -1.3) for patients 65-74 years old. PKT incidence increased significantly during the study period but remained limited compared to the observed decrease in dialysis incidence, especially among older patients. Large differences in dialysis incidence were observed among European countries/regions. A decreasing dialysis incidence among older patients was also seen in Austria, Denmark, England/Wales, Finland, Scotland, and Sweden., Conclusions: The Dutch dialysis incidence decreased most profoundly among older patients. This was also observed in several other European countries/regions. Although PKT incidence increased, it can only explain a minor part of the decrease in dialysis incidence., Competing Interests: M.O, A.A., M.B., and W.B. are investigators for the DIALysis or not: Outcomes in older kidney patients with GerIatriC Assessment (DIALOGICA) study, which is supported by Leading the Change, a Dutch healthcare efficiency evaluation project by Zorgevaluatie Nederland. K.J. received funding from the European Renal Association (ERA) for running the ERA Registry. W.B. received grant support from Zilveren Kruis Insurance, outside the submitted work. All other authors declare they have no competing interests., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the ERA.)
- Published
- 2023
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32. A review of supportive care for older people with advanced chronic kidney disease.
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FitzGerald TJ, Joosten H, van Buren M, Vinen K, and Brown EA
- Abstract
Supportive care (SC) is a multidimensional and person-centred approach to managing advanced CKD that engages the person and their caregivers in shared decision making from the outset. Rather than focusing on disease-specific therapies, SC is a collection of adjuvant interventions and adaptations to conventional treatments that can be used to improve the individual's quality of life. Recognizing that frailty, multi-morbidity and polypharmacy are more common among older people with advanced chronic kidney disease (CKD) and that people in this group tend to prioritize quality of life over survival as a goal of care, SC represents an important adjunct to disease-specific therapies in CKD management. This review provides an overview of SC in the older person with advanced CKD., Competing Interests: None declared., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the ERA.)
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- 2022
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33. Survival of patients who opt for dialysis versus conservative care: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Voorend CGN, van Oevelen M, Verberne WR, van den Wittenboer ID, Dekkers OM, Dekker F, Abrahams AC, van Buren M, Mooijaart SP, and Bos WJW
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- Cohort Studies, Comorbidity, Glomerular Filtration Rate, Humans, Frailty, Renal Dialysis methods
- Abstract
Background: Non-dialytic conservative care (CC) has been proposed as a treatment option for patients with kidney failure. This systematic review and meta-analysis aims at comparing survival outcomes between dialysis and CC in studies where patients made an explicit treatment choice., Methods: Five databases were systematically searched from origin through 25 February 2021 for studies comparing survival outcomes among patients choosing dialysis versus CC. Adjusted and unadjusted survival rates were extracted and meta-analysis performed where applicable. Risk of bias analysis was performed according to the Cochrane Risk Of Bias In Non-randomized Studies of Interventions., Results: A total of 22 cohort studies were included covering 21 344 patients. Most studies were prone to selection bias and confounding. Patients opting for dialysis were generally younger and had fewer comorbid conditions, fewer functional impairments and less frailty than patients who chose CC. The unadjusted median survival from treatment decision or an estimated glomerular filtration rate <15 mL/min/1.73 m2 ranged from 20 and 67 months for dialysis and 6 and 31 months for CC. Meta-analysis of 12 studies that provided adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) for mortality showed a pooled adjusted HR of 0.47 (95% confidence interval 0.39-0.57) for patients choosing dialysis compared with CC. In subgroups of patients with older age or severe comorbidities, the reduction of mortality risk remained statistically significant, although analyses were unadjusted., Conclusions: Patients opting for dialysis have an overall lower mortality risk compared with patients opting for CC. However, a high risk of bias and heterogeneous reporting preclude definitive conclusions and results cannot be translated to an individual level., Competing Interests: Outside the submitted work, C.G.N.V. has received grant support from the Dutch Kidney Foundation and Nephrosearch Foundation; W.R.V. has received grant support from Zilveren Kruis; W.J.W.B. has received grant support from Zilveren Kruis and the Dutch Kidney Foundation; and M.v.B has received grant support from the Dutch Kidney Foundation and Healthcare Evaluation Leading the Change. The remaining authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the ERA.)
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- 2022
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34. Circulating angiopoietin-2 and angiogenic microRNAs associate with cerebral small vessel disease and cognitive decline in older patients reaching end-stage renal disease.
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Bijkerk R, Kallenberg MH, Zijlstra LE, van den Berg BM, de Bresser J, Hammer S, Bron EE, Achterberg H, van Buchem MA, Berkhout-Byrne NC, Bos WJW, van Heemst D, Rabelink TJ, van Zonneveld AJ, van Buren M, and Mooijaart S
- Subjects
- Aged, Angiopoietin-2 genetics, Cognition, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Neuropsychological Tests, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases complications, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases epidemiology, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases genetics, Cognitive Dysfunction genetics, Kidney Failure, Chronic complications, Kidney Failure, Chronic genetics, MicroRNAs genetics
- Abstract
Background: The prevalence of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) is increasing worldwide, with the majority of new ESRD cases diagnosed in patients >60 years of age. These older patients are at increased risk for impaired cognitive functioning, potentially through cerebral small vessel disease (SVD). Novel markers of vascular integrity may be of clinical value for identifying patients at high risk for cognitive impairment., Methods: We aimed to associate the levels of angiopoietin-2 (Ang-2), asymmetric dimethylarginine and a selection of eight circulating angiogenic microRNAs (miRNAs) with SVD and cognitive impairment in older patients reaching ESRD that did not yet initiate renal replacement therapy (n = 129; mean age 75.3 years, mean eGFR 16.4 mL/min). We assessed brain magnetic resonance imaging changes of SVD (white matter hyperintensity volume, microbleeds and the presence of lacunes) and measures of cognition in domains of memory, psychomotor speed and executive function in a neuropsychological test battery., Results: Older patients reaching ESRD showed an unfavourable angiogenic profile, as indicated by aberrant levels of Ang-2 and five angiogenic miRNAs (miR-27a, miR-126, miR-132, miR-223 and miR-326), compared with healthy persons and patients with diabetic nephropathy. Moreover, Ang-2 was associated with SVD and with the domains of psychomotor speed and executive function, while miR-223 and miR-29a were associated with memory function., Conclusions: Taken together, these novel angiogenic markers might serve to identify older patients with ESRD at risk of cognitive decline, as well as provide insights into the underlying (vascular) pathophysiology., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the ERA.)
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- 2022
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35. Circulating miRNAs and Vascular Injury Markers Associate with Cardiovascular Function in Older Patients Reaching End-Stage Kidney Disease.
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Zhao Q, Nooren SJL, Zijlstra LE, Westenberg JJM, Kroft LJM, Jukema JW, Berkhout-Byrne NC, Rabelink TJ, van Zonneveld AJ, van Buren M, Mooijaart SP, and Bijkerk R
- Abstract
The prevalence of end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) is rapidly increasing and mostly occurring in patients aged 65 years or older. The main cause of death in these patients is cardiovascular disease (CVD). Novel markers of vascular integrity may thus be of clinical value for identifying patients at high risk for CVD. Here we associated the levels of selected circulating angiogenic miRNAs, angiopoietin-2 (Ang-2) and asymmetric dimethylarginine (ADMA) with cardiovascular structure and function (as determined by cardiovascular MRI) in 67 older patients reaching ESKD that were included from 'The Cognitive decline in Older Patients with End stage renal disease' (COPE) prospective, multicentered cohort study. We first determined the association between the vascular injury markers and specific heart conditions and observed that ESKD patients with coronary heart disease have significantly higher levels of circulating ADMA and miR-27a. Moreover, circulating levels of miR-27a were higher in patients with atrial fibrillation. In addition, the circulating levels of the vascular injury markers were associated with measures of cardiovascular structure and function obtained from cardiovascular MRI: pulse wave velocity (PWV), ejection fraction (EF) and cardiac index (CI). We found Ang-2 and miR-27a to be strongly correlated to the PWV, while Ang-2 also associated with ejection fraction. Finally, we observed that in contrast to miR-27a, Ang-2 was not associated with a vascular cause of the primary kidney disease, suggesting Ang-2 may be an ESKD-specific marker of vascular injury. Taken together, among older patients with ESKD, aberrant levels of vascular injury markers (miR-27a, Ang-2 and ADMA) associated with impaired cardiovascular function. These markers may serve to identify individuals at higher risk of CVD, as well as give insight into the underlying (vascular) pathophysiology.
- Published
- 2022
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36. Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on symptoms of anxiety and depression and health-related quality of life in older patients with chronic kidney disease.
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Voorend CGN, van Oevelen M, Nieberg M, Meuleman Y, Franssen CFM, Joosten H, Berkhout-Byrne NC, Abrahams AC, Mooijaart SP, Bos WJW, and van Buren M
- Subjects
- Aged, Anxiety diagnosis, Anxiety epidemiology, Depression diagnosis, Depression epidemiology, Humans, Male, Pandemics, Prospective Studies, Quality of Life, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic diagnosis, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic epidemiology
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Background: Older patients with advanced chronic kidney disease are at increased risk for a severe course of the coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) and vulnerable to mental health problems. We aimed to investigate prevalence and associated patient (demographic and clinical) characteristics of mental wellbeing (health-related quality of life [HRQoL] and symptoms of depression and anxiety) before and during the COVID-19 pandemic in older patients with advanced chronic kidney disease., Methods: An ongoing Dutch multicentre prospective cohort study enrols patients of ≥70 years with an eGFR < 20 mL/min/1.73m
2 from October 2018 onward. With additional questionnaires during the pandemic (May-June 2020), disease-related concerns about COVID-19 and general anxiety symptoms were assessed cross-sectionally, and depressive symptoms, HRQoL, and emotional symptoms longitudinally., Results: The 82 included patients had a median age of 77.5 years (interquartile range 73.9-82.1), 77% were male and none had tested positive for COVID-19. Cross-sectionally, 67% of the patients reported to be more anxious about COVID-19 because of their kidney disease, and 43% of the patients stated that their quality of life was reduced due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Compared to pre-COVID-19, the presence of depressive symptoms had increased (11 to 22%; p = .022) and physical HRQoL declined (M = 40.4, SD = 10.1 to M = 36.1, SD = 10.4; p < .001), particularly in males. Mental HRQoL (M = 50.3, SD = 9.6 to M = 50.4, SD = 9.9; p = .913) and emotional symptoms remained similar., Conclusions: Older patients with advanced chronic kidney disease suffered from disease-related anxiety about COVID-19, increased depressive symptoms and reduced physical HRQoL during the COVID-19 pandemic. The impact of the pandemic on this vulnerable patient group extends beyond increased mortality risk, and awareness of mental wellbeing is important., Trial Registration: The study is registered at the Netherlands Trial Register (NTR), trial number NL7104. Date of registration: 06-06-2018., (© 2021. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2021
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37. Dialysis withdrawal in The Netherlands between 2000 and 2019: time trends, risk factors and centre variation.
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van Oevelen M, Abrahams AC, Bos WJW, Hoekstra T, Hemmelder MH, Ten Dam M, and van Buren M
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- Female, Humans, Netherlands epidemiology, Registries, Risk Factors, Kidney Failure, Chronic therapy, Renal Dialysis
- Abstract
Background: Dialysis withdrawal is a common cause of death in dialysis-dependent patients. This study aims to describe dialysis withdrawal practice in The Netherlands, focussing on time trends, risk factors and centre variation., Methods: Data were retrieved from the Dutch registry of kidney replacement therapy patients. All patients who started maintenance dialysis and died in the period 2000-2019 were included. The main outcome was death after dialysis withdrawal; all other causes of death were used for comparison. Time trends were analysed as unadjusted data (proportion per year) and the year of death was included in a multivariable logistic model. Univariable and multivariable analyses were performed to identify factors associated with withdrawal. Centre variation was compared using funnel plots., Results: A total of 34 692 patients started dialysis and 18 412 patients died while on dialysis. Dialysis withdrawal was an increasingly common cause of death, increasing from 18.3% in 2000-2004 to 26.8% in 2015-2019. Of all patients withdrawing, 26.1% discontinued treatment within their first year. In multivariable analysis, increasing age, female sex, haemodialysis as a treatment modality and year of death were independent factors associated with death after dialysis withdrawal. Centre variation was large (80.7 and 57.4% within 95% control limits of the funnel plots for 2000-2009 and 2010-2019, respectively), even after adjustment for confounding factors., Conclusions: Treatment withdrawal has become the main cause of death among dialysis-dependent patients in The Netherlands, with large variations between centres. These findings emphasize the need for timely advance care planning and improving the shared decision-making process on choosing dialysis or conservative care., (© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of ERA-EDTA.)
- Published
- 2021
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38. Changing the choice from dialysis to conservative care or vice versa in older patients with advanced chronic kidney disease.
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Voorend CGN, Verberne WR, van Oevelen M, Meuleman Y, van Buren M, and Bos WJW
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- Aged, Humans, Renal Dialysis, Kidney Failure, Chronic therapy, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic therapy
- Published
- 2021
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39. Health-related quality of life and symptoms of conservative care versus dialysis in patients with end-stage kidney disease: a systematic review.
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Verberne WR, van den Wittenboer ID, Voorend CGN, Abrahams AC, van Buren M, Dekker FW, van Jaarsveld BC, van Loon IN, Mooijaart SP, Ocak G, van Delden JJM, and Bos WJW
- Subjects
- Cohort Studies, Humans, Prospective Studies, Renal Dialysis, Kidney Failure, Chronic therapy, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Background: Non-dialytic conservative care (CC) has been proposed as a viable alternative to maintenance dialysis for selected older patients to treat end-stage kidney disease (ESKD). This systematic review compares both treatment pathways on health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and symptoms, which are major outcomes for patients and clinicians when deciding on preferred treatment., Methods: We searched PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL) Plus and PsycINFO from inception to 1 October 2019 for studies comparing patient-reported HRQoL outcomes or symptoms between patients who chose either CC or dialysis for ESKD., Results: Eleven observational cohort studies were identified comprising 1718 patients overall. There were no randomized controlled trials. Studies were susceptible to selection bias and confounding. In most studies, patients who chose CC were older and had more comorbidities and worse functional status than patients who chose dialysis. Results were broadly consistent across studies, despite considerable clinical and methodological heterogeneity. Patient-reported physical health outcomes and symptoms appeared to be worse in patients who chose CC compared with patients who chose dialysis but had not yet started, but similar compared with patients on dialysis. Mental health outcomes were similar between patients who chose CC or dialysis, including before and after dialysis start. In patients who chose dialysis, the burden of kidney disease and impact on daily life increased after dialysis start., Conclusions: The available data, while heterogeneous, suggest that in selected older patients, CC has the potential to achieve similar HRQoL and symptoms compared with a dialysis pathway. High-quality prospective studies are needed to confirm these provisional findings., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of ERA-EDTA. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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40. Renin-Angiotensin System Blockers and the Risk of COVID-19-Related Mortality in Patients with Kidney Failure.
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Soler MJ, Noordzij M, Abramowicz D, de Arriba G, Basile C, van Buren M, Covic A, Crespo M, Duivenvoorden R, Massy ZA, Ortiz A, Sanchez JE, Petridou E, Stevens K, White C, Vart P, and Gansevoort RT
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme 2 physiology, Female, Hospitalization, Humans, Kidney Transplantation, Male, Middle Aged, Proportional Hazards Models, Angiotensin Receptor Antagonists adverse effects, Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors adverse effects, COVID-19 mortality, Renal Insufficiency complications, SARS-CoV-2
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: There is concern about potential deleterious effects of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEis) and angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARBs) in patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Patients with kidney failure, who often use ACEis/ARBs, are at higher risk of more severe COVID-19. However, there are no data available on the association of ACEi/ARB use with COVID-19 severity in this population., Design, Setting, Participants, & Measurements: From the European Renal Association COVID-19 database (ERACODA), we retrieved data on kidney transplant recipients and patients on dialysis who were affected by COVID-19, between February 1 and October 1, 2020, and had information on 28-day mortality. We used Cox proportional-hazards regression to calculate hazard ratios for the association between ACEi/ARB use and 28-day mortality risk. Additionally, we studied the association of discontinuation of these agents with 28-day mortality., Results: We evaluated 1511 patients: 459 kidney transplant recipients and 1052 patients on dialysis. At diagnosis of COVID-19, 189 (41%) of the transplant recipients and 288 (27%) of the patients on dialysis were on ACEis/ARBs. A total of 88 (19%) transplant recipients and 244 (23%) patients on dialysis died within 28 days of initial presentation. In both groups of patients, there was no association between ACEi/ARB use and 28-day mortality in both crude and adjusted models (in transplant recipients, adjusted hazard ratio, 1.12; 95% confidence interval [95% CI], 0.69 to 1.83; in patients on dialysis, adjusted hazard ratio, 1.04; 95% CI, 0.73 to 1.47). Among transplant recipients, ACEi/ARB discontinuation was associated with a higher mortality risk after adjustment for demographics and comorbidities, but the association was no longer statistically significant after adjustment for severity of COVID-19 (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.36; 95% CI, 0.40 to 4.58). Among patients on dialysis, ACEi/ARB discontinuation was not associated with mortality in any model. We obtained similar results across subgroups when ACEis and ARBs were studied separately, and when other outcomes for severity of COVID-19 were studied, e.g. , hospital admission, admission to the intensive care unit, or need for ventilator support., Conclusions: Among kidney transplant recipients and patients on dialysis with COVID-19, there was no significant association of ACEi/ARB use or discontinuation with mortality., (Copyright © 2021 by the American Society of Nephrology.)
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- 2021
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41. Correction to: DIALysis or not: Outcomes in older kidney patients with GerIatriC Assessment (DIALOGICA): rationale and design.
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van Oevelen M, Abrahams AC, Bos WJW, Emmelot-Vonk MH, Mooijaart SP, van Diepen M, van Jaarsveld BC, van Eck van der Sluijs A, Voorend CGN, and van Buren M
- Published
- 2021
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42. DIALysis or not: Outcomes in older kidney patients with GerIatriC Assessment (DIALOGICA): rationale and design.
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van Oevelen M, Abrahams AC, Bos WJW, Emmelot-Vonk MH, Mooijaart SP, van Diepen M, van Jaarsveld BC, van Eck van der Sluijs A, Voorend CGN, and van Buren M
- Subjects
- Aged, Decision Making, Shared, Female, Humans, Male, Prospective Studies, Geriatric Assessment, Kidney Failure, Chronic therapy, Quality of Life, Renal Dialysis
- Abstract
Background: The incidence and prevalence of older patients with kidney failure who are dependent on dialysis is increasing. However, observational studies showed limited or no benefit of dialysis on mortality in subgroups of these patients when compared to conservative care. As the focus is shifting towards health-related quality of life (HRQoL), current evidence of effects of conservative care or dialysis on HRQoL in older patients is both limited and biased. Dialysis comes with both high treatment burden for patients and high costs for society; better identification of patients who might not benefit from dialysis could result in significant cost savings. The aim of this prospective study is to compare HRQoL, clinical outcomes, and costs between conservative care and dialysis in older patients., Methods: The DIALysis or not: Outcomes in older kidney patients with GerIatriC Assessment (DIALOGICA) study is a prospective, observational cohort study that started in February 2020. It aims to include 1500 patients from 25 Dutch and Belgian centres. Patients aged ≥70 years with an eGFR of 10-15 mL/min/1.73m
2 are enrolled in the first stage of the study. When dialysis is initiated or eGFR drops to 10 mL/min/1.73m2 or lower, the second stage of the study commences. In both stages nephrogeriatric assessments will be performed annually, consisting of questionnaires and tests to assess most common geriatric domains, i.e. functional, psychological, somatic, and social status. The primary outcome is HRQoL, measured with the Twelve-item Short-Form Health Survey. Secondary outcomes are clinical outcomes (mortality, hospitalisation, functional status, cognitive functioning, frailty), cost-effectiveness, and decisional regret. All outcomes are (repeated) measures during the first year of the second stage. The total follow-up will be a maximum of 4 years with a minimum of 1 year in the second stage., Discussion: By generating more insight in the effects of conservative care and dialysis on HRQoL, clinical outcomes, and costs, findings of this study will help patients and physicians make a shared decision on the best individual treatment option for kidney failure., Trial Registration: The study was registered in the Netherlands Trial Register ( NL-8352 ) on 5 February 2020.- Published
- 2021
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43. Perspectives and experiences of patients and healthcare professionals with geriatric assessment in chronic kidney disease: a qualitative study.
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Voorend CGN, Berkhout-Byrne NC, Meuleman Y, Mooijaart SP, Bos WJW, and van Buren M
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Male, Qualitative Research, Attitude of Health Personnel, Attitude to Health, Geriatric Assessment, Kidney Failure, Chronic complications, Kidney Failure, Chronic psychology
- Abstract
Background: Older patients with end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) often live with unidentified frailty and multimorbidity. Despite guideline recommendations, geriatric assessment is not part of standard clinical care, resulting in a missed opportunity to enhance (clinical) outcomes including quality of life in these patients. To develop routine geriatric assessment programs for patients approaching ESKD, it is crucial to understand patients' and professionals' experiences with and perspectives about the benefits, facilitators and barriers for geriatric assessment., Methods: In this qualitative study, semi-structured focus group discussions were conducted with ESKD patients, caregivers and professionals. Participants were purposively sampled from three Dutch hospital-based study- and routine care initiatives involving geriatric assessment for (pre-)ESKD care. Transcripts were analysed inductively using thematic analysis., Results: In six focus-groups, participants (n = 47) demonstrated four major themes: (1) Perceived characteristics of the older (pre)ESKD patient group. Patients and professionals recognized increased vulnerability and (cognitive) comorbidity, which is often unrelated to calendar age. Both believed that often patients are in need of additional support in various geriatric domains. (2) Experiences with geriatric assessment. Patients regarded the content and the time spent on the geriatric assessment predominantly positive. Professionals emphasized that assessment creates awareness among the whole treatment team for cognitive and social problems, shifting the focus from mainly somatic to multidimensional problems. Outcomes of geriatric assessment were observed to enhance a dialogue on suitability of treatment options, (re)adjust treatment and provide/seek additional (social) support. (3) Barriers and facilitators for implementation of geriatric assessment in routine care. Discussed barriers included lack of communication about goals and interpretation of geriatric assessment, burden for patients, illiteracy, and organizational aspects. Major facilitators are good multidisciplinary cooperation, involvement of geriatrics and multidisciplinary team meetings. (4) Desired characteristics of a suitable geriatric assessment concerned the scope and use of tests and timing of assessment., Conclusions: Patients and professionals were positive about using geriatric assessment in routine nephrology care. Implementation seems achievable, once barriers are overcome and facilitators are endorsed. Geriatric assessment in routine care appears promising to improve (clinical) outcomes in patients approaching ESKD.
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- 2021
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44. Patterns and characteristics of cognitive functioning in older patients approaching end stage kidney disease, the COPE-study.
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van Deudekom FJ, Kallenberg MH, Berkhout-Byrne NC, Blauw GJ, Boom H, de Bresser J, van Buchem MA, Gaasbeek A, Hammer S, Lagro J, van Osch MJP, Witjes-Ané MN, Rabelink TJ, van Buren M, and Mooijaart SP
- Subjects
- Aged, Dementia, Vascular diagnosis, Female, Geriatric Assessment methods, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Male, Netherlands epidemiology, Neuropsychological Tests, Prospective Studies, Brain diagnostic imaging, Cognition, Cognitive Dysfunction diagnosis, Cognitive Dysfunction epidemiology, Cognitive Dysfunction metabolism, Cognitive Dysfunction physiopathology, Executive Function, Kidney Failure, Chronic epidemiology, Kidney Failure, Chronic psychology, Psychomotor Performance
- Abstract
Background: The prevalence of impaired cognitive functioning in older patients with end stage kidney disease (ESKD) is high. We aim to describe patterns of memory, executive function or psychomotor speed and to identify nephrologic, geriatric and neuroradiologic characteristics associated with cognitive impairment in older patients approaching ESKD who have not yet started with renal replacement therapy (RRT)., Methods: The COPE-study (Cognitive Decline in Older Patients with ESRD) is a prospective cohort study including 157 participants aged 65 years and older approaching ESKD (eGFR ≤20 ml/min/1.73 m
2 ) prior to starting with RRT. In addition to routinely collected clinical parameters related to ESKD, such as vascular disease burden and parameters of metabolic disturbance, patients received a full geriatric assessment, including extensive neuropsychological testing. In a subgroup of patients (n = 93) a brain MRI was performed., Results: The median age was 75.3 years. Compared to the normative data of neuropsychological testing participants memory performance was in the 24th percentile, executive function in the 18th percentile and psychomotor speed in the 20th percentile. Independent associated characteristics of impairment in memory, executive and psychomotor speed were high age, low educational level and low functional status (all p-values < 0.003). A history of vascular disease (p = 0.007) and more white matter hyperintensities on brain MRI (p = 0.013) were associated with a lower psychomotor speed., Conclusion: Older patients approaching ESKD have a high prevalence of impaired memory, executive function and psychomotor speed. The patterns of cognitive impairment and brain changes on MRI are suggestive of vascular cognitive impairment. These findings could be of potentially added value in the decision-making process concerning patients with ESKD.- Published
- 2020
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45. Predicting mortality risk on dialysis and conservative care: development and internal validation of a prediction tool for older patients with advanced chronic kidney disease.
- Author
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Ramspek CL, Verberne WR, van Buren M, Dekker FW, Bos WJW, and van Diepen M
- Abstract
Background: Conservative care (CC) may be a valid alternative to dialysis for certain older patients with advanced chronic kidney disease (CKD). A model that predicts patient prognosis on both treatment pathways could be of value in shared decision-making. Therefore, the aim is to develop a prediction tool that predicts the mortality risk for the same patient for both dialysis and CC from the time of treatment decision., Methods: CKD Stage 4/5 patients aged ≥70 years, treated at a single centre in the Netherlands, were included between 2004 and 2016. Predictors were collected at treatment decision and selected based on literature and an expert panel. Outcome was 2-year mortality. Basic and extended logistic regression models were developed for both the dialysis and CC groups. These models were internally validated with bootstrapping. Model performance was assessed with discrimination and calibration., Results: In total, 366 patients were included, of which 126 chose CC. Pre-selected predictors for the basic model were age, estimated glomerular filtration rate, malignancy and cardiovascular disease. Discrimination was moderate, with optimism-corrected C-statistics ranging from 0.675 to 0.750. Calibration plots showed good calibration., Conclusions: A prediction tool that predicts 2-year mortality was developed to provide older advanced CKD patients with individualized prognosis estimates for both dialysis and CC. Future studies are needed to test whether our findings hold in other CKD populations. Following external validation, this prediction tool could be used to compare a patient's prognosis on both dialysis and CC, and help to inform treatment decision-making., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of ERA-EDTA.)
- Published
- 2020
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46. The association of kidney function and cognitive decline in older patients at risk of cardiovascular disease: a longitudinal data analysis.
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Zijlstra LE, Trompet S, Mooijaart SP, van Buren M, Sattar N, Stott DJ, and Jukema JW
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Disease Progression, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Prospective Studies, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic complications, Risk Factors, Severity of Illness Index, Cardiovascular Diseases complications, Cognitive Dysfunction etiology, Glomerular Filtration Rate, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic physiopathology, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic psychology
- Abstract
Background: Chronic kidney disease (CKD) has been identified as a significant direct marker for cognitive decline, but controversy exists regarding the magnitude of the association of kidney function with cognitive decline across the different CKD stages. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate the association of kidney function with cognitive decline in older patients at high risk of cardiovascular disease, using data from the PROspective Study of Pravastatin in the Elderly at Risk (PROSPER)., Methods: Data of 5796 patients of PROSPER were used. Strata were made according to clinical stages of CKD based on estimated glomerular filtration rate; < 30 ml/min/1.73m
2 (stage 4), 30-45 ml/min/1.73m2 (stage 3b), 45-60 ml/min/1.73m2 (stage 3a) and ≥ 60 ml/min/1.73m2 (stage 1-2). Cognitive function and functional status was assessed at six different time points and means were compared at baseline and over time, adjusted for multiple prespecified variables. Stratified analyses for history of vascular disease were executed., Results: Mean age was 75.3 years and 48.3% participants were male. Mean follow-up was 3.2 years. For all cognitive function tests CKD stage 4 compared to the other stages had the worst outcome at baseline and a trend for faster cognitive decline over time. When comparing stage 4 versus stage 1-2 over time the estimates (95% CI) were 2.23 (0.60-3.85; p = 0.009) for the Stroop-Colour-Word test, - 0.33 (- 0.66-0.001; p = 0.051) for the Letter-Digit-Coding test, 0.08 (- 0.06-0.21; p = 0.275) for the Picture-Word-Learning test with immediate recall and - 0.07 (- 0.02-0.05; p = 0.509) for delayed recall. This association was most present in patients with a history of vascular disease. No differences were found in functional status., Conclusion: In older people with vascular burden, only severe kidney disease (CKD stage 4), but not mild to modest kidney disease (CKD stage 3a and b), seem to be associated with cognitive impairment at baseline and cognitive decline over time. The association of severe kidney failure with cognitive impairment and decline over time was more outspoken in patients with a history of vascular disease, possibly due to a higher probability of polyvascular damage, in both kidney and brain, in patients with proven cardiovascular disease.- Published
- 2020
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47. Association of cardiovascular structure and function with cerebrovascular changes and cognitive function in older patients with end-stage renal disease.
- Author
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Zijlstra LE, Trompet S, Jukema JW, Kroft LJM, de Bresser J, van Osch MJP, Hammer S, Witjes MN, van Buren M, and Mooijaart SP
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Aged, Cardiovascular System pathology, Cardiovascular System physiopathology, Clinical Decision-Making, Cognition, Decision Trees, Disease Management, Female, Heart Function Tests, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Cardiovascular Diseases diagnosis, Cardiovascular Diseases etiology, Cerebrovascular Disorders diagnosis, Cerebrovascular Disorders etiology, Kidney Failure, Chronic complications
- Abstract
The Dutch prospective multicenter cohort study COPE (Cognitive decline in Older Patients with End stage renal disease) aimed to investigate the association of cardiovascular structure and function with cerebrovascular changes and cognitive function in 85 older patients with chronic kidney disease stage 4 and 5, awaiting either dialysis or conservative care. MRI was performed measuring aortic stiffness (pulse wave velocity [PWV]) and cardiac systolic function (ejection fraction and cardiac index). Outcomes were MRI-derived cerebrovascular changes (microbleeds, lacunes and white matter hyperintensities) and cognitive function (memory, executive function and psychomotor speed). Mean age was 76 years and 66% were male. No statistically significant associations were observed between cardiovascular parameters and cerebrovascular changes. Cognitive function was worse in patients with high compared to low PWV in all three cognitive domains. Although there were clinically relevant associations of high PWV with poor cognition in all domains, after adjustment for age, sex and education only the Trail Making Test A remained statistically significant (p=0.030). In conclusion, this study suggests that a higher PWV might be associated with lower cognitive function, suggesting that arterial stiffness may be an underlying mechanism of development of cognitive impairment in older patients with ESRD. Larger studies should replicate and extend these findings.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The kidney, subclinical thyroid disease and cardiovascular outcomes in older patients.
- Author
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Zijlstra LE, van Velzen DM, Simsek S, Mooijaart SP, van Buren M, Stott DJ, Ford I, Jukema JW, and Trompet S
- Abstract
Objective: Thyroid hormones have been implicated to play a role in cardiovascular disease, along with studies linking thyroid hormone to kidney function. The aim of this study is to investigate whether kidney function modifies the association of subclinical thyroid dysfunction and the risk of cardiovascular outcomes., Methods: In total, 5804 patients were included in the PROspective Study of Pravastatin in the Elderly at Risk (PROSPER). For the current analysis, 426 were excluded because of overt thyroid disease at baseline or 6 months, 266 because of inconsistent thyroid function at baseline and 6 months, 294 because of medication use that could influence thyroid function, and 16 because of missing kidney or thyroid values. Participants with normal fT4 were classified, based on TSH both at inclusion and 6 months, into three groups: subclinical hypothyroidism (TSH >4.5 mIU/L); euthyroidism (TSH = 0.45-4.5 mIU/L); and subclinical hyperthyroidism (TSH <0.45 mIU/L). Strata of kidney function were made based on estimated glomerular filtration rate into three clinically relevant groups: <45, 45-60, and >60 mL/min/1.73 m2. The primary endpoint consists of death from coronary heart disease, non-fatal myocardial infarction and (non)fatal stroke., Results: Mean age was 75.3 years, and 49.0% patients were male. Mean follow-up was 3.2 years. Of all participants, 109 subjects (2.2%) had subclinical hypothyroidism, 4573 (94.0%) had euthyroidism, and 182 (3.7%) subclinical hyperthyroidism. For patients with subclinical hypothyroidism, euthyroidism, and subclinical hyperthyroidism, primary outcome occurred in 9 (8.3%), 712 (15.6%), and 23 (12.6%) patients, respectively. No statistically significant relationship was found between subclinical thyroid dysfunction and primary endpoint with adjusted hazard ratios of 0.51 (0.24-1.07) comparing subclinical hyperthyroidism and 0.90 (0.58-1.39) comparing subclinical hypothyroidism with euthyroidism. Neither was this relationship present in any of the strata of kidney function, nor did kidney function interact with subclinical thyroid dysfunction in the association with primary endpoint (P interaction = 0.602 for subclinical hyperthyroidism and 0.388 for subclinical hypothyroidism)., Conclusions: In this secondary analysis from PROSPER, we found no evidence that the potential association between thyroid hormones and cardiovascular disease is modified by kidney function in older patients with subclinical thyroid dysfunction.
- Published
- 2020
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49. Renal Impairment, Cardiovascular Disease, and the Short-Term Efficacy and Safety of PCSK9 Targeted by Inclisiran.
- Author
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Zijlstra LE, Trompet S, Mooijaart SP, van Buren M, and Jukema JW
- Subjects
- Humans, RNA, Small Interfering, Cardiovascular Diseases, Proprotein Convertase 9
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Vancomycin pharmacokinetic model development in patients on intermittent online hemodiafiltration.
- Author
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Westra N, Proost JH, Franssen CFM, Wilms EB, van Buren M, and Touw DJ
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Anti-Bacterial Agents administration & dosage, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Biological, Retrospective Studies, Vancomycin administration & dosage, Vancomycin therapeutic use, Anti-Bacterial Agents blood, Hemodiafiltration methods, Vancomycin blood
- Abstract
Background: Vancomycin is frequently used in hemodialysis (HD) and in hemodiafiltration (HDF) patients and is usually administered in the last 30 or 60 minutes of a dialysis session. Vancomycin pharmacokinetics are not well described in HDF patients. The aim of this study is to develop a population pharmacokinetic (PPK) model and dosing regimen for vancomycin in HDF patients and to evaluate its applicability in low-flux (LF-HD) patients., Methods: Two-compartment PPK models were developed using data from HDF patients (n = 17), and was parameterized as follows: non-renal clearance (CLm), renal clearance as a fraction of creatinine clearance (fr), central volume of distribution (V1), intercompartmental clearance (CL12), peripheral volume of distribution (V2) and extracorporeal extraction ratio (Eec). We evaluated the final model in a cohort of LF-HD patients (n = 21). Dosing schemes were developed for a vancomycin 24-h AUC of 400 mg*h/L., Results: Model parameters (± SD) were: CLm = 0.473 (0.271) L/h, fr = 0.1 (fixed value), V1 = 0.278 (0.092) L/kgLBMc, CL12 = 9.96 L/h (fixed value), V2 = 0.686 (0.335) L/kgLBMc and Eec = 0.212 (0.069). The model reliably predicted serum levels of vancomycin in both HDF and LF-HD patients during and between dialysis sessions. The median of the prediction error (MDPE) as a measure of bias is -0.7% (95% CI: -3.4%-1.7%) and the median of the absolute values of the prediction errors (MDAPE) as a measure of precision is 7.9% (95% CI: 6.0%-9.8%). In both HDF and LF-HD, the optimal vancomycin loading dose for a typical patient weighing 70 kg is 1700 mg when administered during the last 60 minutes of the hemodialysis session. Maintenance dose is 700 mg if administered during the last 30 or 60 minutes of the hemodialysis session., Conclusion: The developed PPK model for HDF is also capable of predicting serum levels of vancomycin in patients on LF-HD. A dosing regimen was developed for the use of vancomycin in HDF and LF-HD., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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