1. Renal resistive index as a new independent risk factor for new-onset diabetes mellitus after kidney transplantation
- Author
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Yvon Lebranchu, Matthias Büchler, Christopher Boin, Julie Réault, Jean-Michel Halimi, Agnès Caille, Christelle Barbet, Inass Laouad, Hubert Nivet, A. Al-Najjar, Prisca Mutinelli-Szymanski, François Tranquart, Philippe Gatault, Jean-Frédéric Marlière, and Valérie Chatelet
- Subjects
Transplantation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Hazard ratio ,Urology ,medicine.disease ,Nephropathy ,Pulse pressure ,Blood pressure ,Endocrinology ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,medicine ,Risk factor ,business ,Kidney transplantation - Abstract
Summary Pulse pressure and urinary albumin excretion were recently identified as risk factors of new-onset diabetes after renal transplantation (NODAT), suggesting that microvascular injury may be implicated in NODAT. However, the relationship between of microvascular injury and NODAT is unknown. In the present long-term (median follow-up: 5.7 years; observation period: 4908 patient-years) retrospective study in 656 renal transplant recipients, the association between baseline renal resistance index (RI, used as a marker of widespread microvascular damage) and the incidence of NODAT was assessed. The incidence of NODAT was 11.2% and 14.6% at 5 and 10 years, respectively, after transplantation. RI at 3 months was a risk factor for NODAT [hazard ratio (HR) per 0.1: 2.19 (1.55–3.09), P 0.75 (vs. 0 ≤ 0.75) was a potent a predictor of NODAT [HR: 3.29 (1.91–5.67), P
- Published
- 2012
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