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Renal Handling of Galectin‐3 in the General Population, Chronic Heart Failure, and Hemodialysis

Authors :
Nicolas F. Schroten
Rudolf A. de Boer
A. Rogier van der Velde
Martin M Dokter
Ron T. Gansevoort
Willem P. T. Ruifrok
Solmaz Assa
Herman H W Silljé
Wouter C. Meijers
Wiek H. van Gilst
Casper F. M. Franssen
Kevin Damman
Cardiovascular Centre (CVC)
Groningen Kidney Center (GKC)
Source :
Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease, Journal of the American Heart Association, 3(5):e000962. Wiley
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2014.

Abstract

BackgroundGalectin‐3 is a biomarker for prognostication and risk stratification of patients with heart failure (HF). It has been suggested that renal function strongly relates to galectin‐3 levels. We aimed to describe galectin‐3 renal handling inHF.Methods and ResultsIn Sprague–Dawley rats, we infused galectin‐3 and studied distribution and renal clearance. Furthermore, galectin‐3 was measured in urine and plasma of healthy controls, HF patients and hemodialysis patients. To mimic the human situation, we measured galectin‐3 before and after the artificial kidney. Infusion in rats resulted in a clear increase in plasma and urine galectin‐3. Plasma galectin‐3 in HF patients (n=101; mean age 64 years; 93% male) was significantly higher compared to control subjects (n=20; mean age 58 years; 75% male) (16.6 ng/mLversus 9.7 ng/mL,PmLversus 35.1 ng/mL,P=0.830). The calculated galectin‐3 excretion rate was lower in HF patient (2.3 mL/min [1.5 to 3.4] versus 3.9 mL/min [2.3 to 6.4] in control subjects;P=0.005). This corresponded with a significantly lower fractional excretion of galectin‐3 in HF patients (2.4% [1.7 to 3.7] versus 3.0% [1.9 to 5.5];P=0.018). These differences, however, were no longer significant after correction for age, gender, diabetes, and smoking. HF patients who received diuretics (49%) showed significantly higher aldosterone and galectin‐3 levels. Hemodialysis patients (n=105; mean age 63 years; 65% male), without urinary galectin‐3 excretion, had strongly increased median plasma galectin‐3 levels (70.6 ng/mL).ConclusionsIn this small cross‐sectional study, we report that urine levels of galectin‐3 are not increased inHFpatients, despite substantially increased plasma galectin‐3 levels. The impaired renal handling of galectin‐3 in patients withHFmay explain the described relation between renal function and galectin‐3 and may account for the elevated plasma galectin‐3 inHF.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20479980
Volume :
3
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f15ad6f4bf3733e5781cc432ea2ff0c6