1. Association of serum uromodulin with mortality and cardiovascular disease in the elderly-the Cardiovascular Health Study.
- Author
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Steubl, Dominik, Buzkova, Petra, Garimella, Pranav S, Ix, Joachim H, Devarajan, Prasad, Bennett, Michael R, Chaves, Paulo HM, Shlipak, Michael G, Bansal, Nisha, and Sarnak, Mark J
- Subjects
Heart Disease ,Kidney Disease ,Clinical Research ,Aging ,Prevention ,Cardiovascular ,Good Health and Well Being ,Aged ,Albuminuria ,Biomarkers ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Female ,Glomerular Filtration Rate ,Humans ,Male ,Prognosis ,Risk Factors ,Survival Rate ,Uromodulin ,cardiovascular disease ,chronic kidney disease ,Tamm-Horsfall protein ,tubular function ,uromodulin ,Tamm–Horsfall protein ,Clinical Sciences ,Urology & Nephrology - Abstract
BackgroundUromodulin (UMOD) is released by renal tubular cells into the serum (sUMOD) and urine. Lower urine UMOD has been linked to mortality and cardiovascular disease but much less is known about sUMOD. We evaluated the association of sUMOD with these outcomes in community-dwelling older adults.MethodsWe measured sUMOD in a random subcohort of 933 participants enrolled in the Cardiovascular Health Study. The associations of sUMOD with all-cause mortality, incident heart failure (HF) and incident cardiovascular disease (CVD; myocardial infarction, stroke and mortality due to coronary disease or stroke) were evaluated using multivariable Cox regression, adjusting for study participants' demographics, estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), albuminuria and CVD risk factors. Generalized additive models with splines were used to address the functional form of sUMOD with outcomes. Due to nonlinear associations of sUMOD with all outcomes, 2.5% of the values on either end of the sUMOD distribution were excluded from the analyses, limiting the range of sUMOD to 34.3-267.1 ng/mL.ResultsThe mean age was 78 ± 5 years, 40% were male, sUMOD level was 127 ± 64 ng/mL, eGFR was 63 mL/min/1.73 m2 and 42% had CKD defined as eGFR
- Published
- 2020