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Urinary markers of kidney injury and kidney function decline in HIV-infected women.

Authors :
Shlipak, Michael G
Shlipak, Michael G
Scherzer, Rebecca
Abraham, Alison
Tien, Phyllis C
Grunfeld, Carl
Peralta, Carmen A
Devarajan, Prasad
Bennett, Michael
Butch, Anthony W
Anastos, Kathryn
Cohen, Mardge H
Nowicki, Marek
Sharma, Anjali
Young, Mary A
Sarnak, Mark J
Parikh, Chirag R
Shlipak, Michael G
Shlipak, Michael G
Scherzer, Rebecca
Abraham, Alison
Tien, Phyllis C
Grunfeld, Carl
Peralta, Carmen A
Devarajan, Prasad
Bennett, Michael
Butch, Anthony W
Anastos, Kathryn
Cohen, Mardge H
Nowicki, Marek
Sharma, Anjali
Young, Mary A
Sarnak, Mark J
Parikh, Chirag R
Source :
Journal of acquired immune deficiency syndromes (1999); vol 61, iss 5, 565-573; 1525-4135
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

ObjectiveHIV-infected persons have substantially higher risk of kidney failure than persons without HIV, but serum creatinine levels are insensitive for detecting declining kidney function. We hypothesized that urine markers of kidney injury would be associated with declining kidney function among HIV-infected women.MethodsIn the Women's Interagency HIV Study, we measured concentrations of albumin-to-creatinine ratio, interleukin-18 (IL-18), kidney injury marker-1 (KIM-1), and neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin from stored urine among 908 HIV-infected and 289 HIV-uninfected participants. Primary analyses used cystatin C-based estimated glomerular filtration rate (CKD-EPI eGFRcys) as the outcome, measured at baseline and 2 follow-up visits over 8 years; secondary analyses used creatinine (CKD-EPI eGFRcr). Each urine biomarker was categorized into tertiles, and kidney decline was modeled with both continuous and dichotomized outcomes.ResultsCompared with the lowest tertiles, the highest tertiles of albumin-to-creatinine ratio (-0.15 mL/min per 1.73 m, P < 0.0001), IL-18 (-0.09 mL/min per 1.73 m, P < 0.0001) and KIM-1 (-0.06 mL/min per 1.73 m, P < 0.001) were independently associated with faster eGFRcys decline after multivariate adjustment including all 3 biomarkers among HIV-infected women. Among these biomarkers, only IL-18 was associated with each dichotomized eGFRcys outcome: ≥3% (relative risk = 1.40; 95% confidence interval: 1.04 to 1.89); ≥5% (1.88; 1.30 to 2.71); and ≥10% (2.16; 1.20 to 3.88) for the highest versus lowest tertile. In alternative models using eGFRcr, the high tertile of KIM-1 had independent associations with 5% (1.71; 1.25 to 2.33) and 10% (1.78; 1.07 to 2.96) decline, and the high IL-18 tertile with 10% decline (1.97; 1.00 to 3.87).ConclusionsAmong HIV-infected women in the Women's Interagency HIV Study cohort, novel urine markers of kidney injury detect risk for subsequent declines in kidney function.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Journal of acquired immune deficiency syndromes (1999); vol 61, iss 5, 565-573; 1525-4135
Notes :
application/pdf, Journal of acquired immune deficiency syndromes (1999) vol 61, iss 5, 565-573 1525-4135
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1377976065
Document Type :
Electronic Resource