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Major cardiovascular events and subsequent risk of kidney failure with replacement therapy

Authors :
Patrick B Mark
Juan J Carrero
Kunihiro Matsushita
Yingying Sang
Shoshana H Ballew
Morgan E Grams
Josef Coresh
Aditya Surapaneni
Nigel J Brunskill
John Chalmers
Lili Chan
Alex R Chang
Rajkumar Chinnadurai
Gabriel Chodick
Massimo Cirillo
Dick de Zeeuw
Marie Evans
Amit X Garg
Orlando M Gutierrez
Hiddo J L Heerspink
Gunnar H Heine
William G Herrington
Junichi Ishigami
Florian Kronenberg
Jun Young Lee
Adeera Levin
Rupert W Major
Angharad Marks
Girish N Nadkarni
David M J Naimark
Christoph Nowak
Mahboob Rahman
Charumathi Sabanayagam
Mark Sarnak
Simon Sawhney
Markus P Schneider
Varda Shalev
Jung-Im Shin
Moneeza K Siddiqui
Nikita Stempniewicz
Keiichi Sumida
José M Valdivielso
Jan van den Brand
Angela Yee-Moon Wang
David C Wheeler
Lihua Zhang
Frank L J Visseren
Benedicte Stengel
Source :
European Heart Journal. 44(13):1157-1166
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Aims Chronic kidney disease (CKD) increases risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD). Less is known about how CVD associates with future risk of kidney failure with replacement therapy (KFRT). Methods and results The study included 25 903 761 individuals from the CKD Prognosis Consortium with known baseline estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) and evaluated the impact of prevalent and incident coronary heart disease (CHD), stroke, heart failure (HF), and atrial fibrillation (AF) events as time-varying exposures on KFRT outcomes. Mean age was 53 (standard deviation 17) years and mean eGFR was 89 mL/min/1.73 m2, 15% had diabetes and 8.4% had urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio (ACR) available (median 13 mg/g); 9.5% had prevalent CHD, 3.2% prior stroke, 3.3% HF, and 4.4% prior AF. During follow-up, there were 269 142 CHD, 311 021 stroke, 712 556 HF, and 605 596 AF incident events and 101 044 (0.4%) patients experienced KFRT. Both prevalent and incident CVD were associated with subsequent KFRT with adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) of 3.1 [95% confidence interval (CI): 2.9–3.3], 2.0 (1.9–2.1), 4.5 (4.2–4.9), 2.8 (2.7–3.1) after incident CHD, stroke, HF and AF, respectively. HRs were highest in first 3 months post-CVD incidence declining to baseline after 3 years. Incident HF hospitalizations showed the strongest association with KFRT [HR 46 (95% CI: 43–50) within 3 months] after adjustment for other CVD subtype incidence. Conclusion Incident CVD events strongly and independently associate with future KFRT risk, most notably after HF, then CHD, stroke, and AF. Optimal strategies for addressing the dramatic risk of KFRT following CVD events are needed.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0195668X
Volume :
44
Issue :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Heart Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3b1c5b508c0b05035b1feed37e73661b