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Albuminuric and non-albuminuric reduced eGFR phenotypes in youth with type 1 diabetes: Factors associated with cardiometabolic risk

Authors :
Maurizio Delvecchio
C. Ripoli
Claudia Piona
Alberto Casertano
Roberto Franceschi
Riccardo Schiaffini
Maria R Ricciardi
Valentino Tiberi
Elvira Piccinno
T. Suprani
Giulio Maltoni
Enza Mozzillo
Procolo Di Bonito
Angela Zanfardino
Dario Iafusco
Gianluca Tornese
Silvia Savastio
C. Arnaldi
Valentino Cherubini
Francesco Maria Rosanio
Brunella Iovane
Claudio Maffeis
Adriana Franzese
Di Bonito, P.
Mozzillo, E.
Rosanio, F. M.
Maltoni, G.
Piona, C. A.
Franceschi, R.
Ripoli, C.
Ricciardi, M. R.
Tornese, G.
Arnaldi, C.
Iovane, B.
Iafusco, D.
Zanfardino, A.
Suprani, T.
Savastio, S.
Cherubini, V.
Tiberi, V.
Piccinno, E.
Schiaffini, R.
Delvecchio, M.
Casertano, A.
Maffeis, C.
Franzese, A.
Di Bonito, Procolo
Mozzillo, Enza
Rosanio, Francesco Maria
Maltoni, Giulio
Piona, Claudia Anita
Franceschi, Roberto
Ripoli, Carlo
Ricciardi, Maria Rossella
Tornese, Gianluca
Arnaldi, Claudia
Iovane, Brunella
Iafusco, Dario
Zanfardino, Angela
Suprani, Tosca
Savastio, Silvia
Cherubini, Valentino
Tiberi, Valentina
Piccinno, Elvira
Schiaffini, Riccardo
Delvecchio, Maurizio
Casertano, Alberto
Maffeis, Claudio
Franzese, Adriana
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background and aim: Albuminuria and reduced eGFR are hallmarks of Diabetic Kidney Disease in adults. Our aim was to analyze factors associated with albuminuric and non-albuminuric mildly reduced eGFR phenotypes in youths with type 1 diabetes. Methods and results: This multicenter cross-sectional study included 1549 youths (age 5–17 years) with type 1 diabetes enrolled at 14 Italian Pediatric Diabetes Centers. Albuminuria, creatinine, glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c), lipids, blood pressure (BP), neutrophils (N) and lymphocytes (L) count were analyzed. Uric acid (UA) was available in 848 individuals. Estimated GFR (eGFR) was calculated using bedside Schwartz's equation. The sample was divided in three phenotypes: 1) normoalbuminuria and eGFR ≥90 mL/min/1.73 m2 (reference category, n = 1204), 2) albuminuric and normal GFR phenotype (n = 106), 3) non-albuminuric mildly reduced GFR (MRGFR) phenotype (eGFR 60–89 mL/min/1.73 m2, n = 239). Albuminuric and non-albuminuric reduced eGFR phenotypes were significantly associated with autoimmune thyroiditis (P =0.028 and P=0.044, respectively). Albuminuric phenotype showed high risk of high HbA1c (P=0.029), high BP (P < 0.001), and low HDL-C (P =0.045) vs reference category. Non-albuminuric MRGFR phenotype showed high risk of high BP (P < 0.0001), low HDL-C (P =0.042), high Triglycerides/HDL-C ratio (P =0.019), and high UA (P < 0.0001) vs reference category. Conclusion: Non albuminuric MRGFR phenotype is more prevalent than albuminuric phenotype and shows a worst cardiometabolic risk (CMR) profile). Both phenotypes are associated with autoimmune thyroiditis. Our data suggest to evaluate both albuminuria and eGFR earlier in type 1 diabetes to timely identify young people with altered CMR profile.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e77c2d6bbef6f5dbba88808c239c06e8