Association of Obesity With Kidney and Cardiac Outcomes Among Patients With Glomerular Disease: Findings From the Cure Glomerulonephropathy Network

IF 9.4 1区 医学 Q1 UROLOGY & NEPHROLOGY American Journal of Kidney Diseases Pub Date : 2024-05-13 DOI:10.1053/j.ajkd.2024.03.020
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Abstract

Rationale & Objective

The influence of obesity on cardiorenal outcomes in individuals with glomerular disease is incompletely known. This study examined the association between obesity and kidney and cardiovascular outcomes in children and adults with glomerular kidney disease.

Study Design

Prospective, multicenter, observational study.

Setting & Participants

Participants in the Cure Glomerulonephropathy Network (CureGN) who were ≥5 years of age at enrollment.

Exposure

Adult body mass index (BMI) groups: 20-24 (healthy) versus 25-34 (overweight/class 1 obesity) versus ≥35 (class 2-3 obesity); and pediatric BMI percentiles: 5th-84th (healthy) versus 85th-94th (overweight) versus ≥95th (obese).

Outcome

A composite kidney outcome (40% estimated glomerular filtration rate [eGFR] decline or kidney failure) and a composite cardiovascular outcome (myocardial infarction, stroke, heart failure, or death).

Analytical Approach

Time to composite primary outcomes by BMI strata were estimated using Kaplan-Meier analysis. The adjusted associations between BMI and outcomes were estimated using Cox proportional hazards analysis.

Results

The study included 2,301 participants (1,548 adults and 753 children). The incidence of the primary kidney end point was 90.8 per 1,000 person-years in adults with class 2-3 obesity, compared with 58.0 in normal weight comparators. In the univariable analysis, class 2-3 obesity was associated with the primary kidney outcome only in adults (HR, 1.6 [95% CI, 1.1-2.2], P = 0.006) compared with the healthy weight groups. In the multivariable adjusted analysis, class 2-3 obesity did not remain significant among adults when controlling for baseline eGFR and proteinuria. Adults with class 2-3 obesity had an incidence of 19.7 cardiovascular events per 1,000 person-years and greater cardiovascular risk (HR, 3.9 [95% CI, 1.4-10.7], P = 0.009) in the fully adjusted model.

Limitations

BMI is an imperfect indicator of adiposity. Residual confounding may exist from socioeconomic factors.

Conclusions

Among adult patients in CureGN, class 2-3 obesity is associated with cardiovascular but not kidney outcomes when adjusted for potential confounding factors.

Plain-Language Summary

Obesity is a risk factor for adverse heart and kidney outcomes in patients with chronic kidney disease, but whether it is associated with these outcomes in patients with glomerulonephropathy is not known. This study used existing data from a large sample of adults and children with glomerular diseases to address this question. The findings suggest that obesity increases the risk of cardiovascular but not kidney disease events in adult patients with glomerular disease.

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肾小球疾病患者肥胖与肾脏和心脏预后的关系:肾小球肾病治疗网络的研究结果。
理由和目标:肥胖对肾小球疾病患者心肾功能结果的影响尚不完全清楚。本研究探讨了肥胖与肾小球肾病儿童和成人患者的肾脏和心血管预后之间的关系:前瞻性、多中心、观察性研究:研究对象:肾小球肾病治疗网络(CureGN)中入组时年龄≥5岁的参与者:成人体重指数(BMI)组:20-24(健康) vs 25-34(超重/1级肥胖) vs ≥35(2/3级肥胖);儿童体重指数百分位数:结果:结果:综合肾脏结果(eGFR 下降 40% 或肾衰竭)和综合心血管结果(心肌梗死、中风、心衰或死亡 分析方法:采用卡普兰-梅尔分析法估算按 BMI 分层得出综合主要结果的时间。采用 Cox 比例危险分析法估算 BMI 与结果之间的调整关系:研究纳入了 2301 名参与者(1548 名成人和 753 名儿童)。2/3级肥胖成人的主要肾脏终点发病率为每千人年90.8例,而体重正常者为58.0例。在单变量分析中,与健康体重组相比,2/3 级肥胖仅与成人的主要肾脏结果有关(HR 1.6,95% CI 1.1-2.2,p = 0.006)。在多变量调整分析中,在控制基线肾小球滤过率和蛋白尿的情况下,2/3 级肥胖在成人中并不显著。在完全调整模型中,2/3级肥胖的成年人每1000人年发生19.7起心血管事件,心血管风险更高(HR 3.9,95%CI 1.4-10.7,p = 0.009):局限性:体重指数是一个不完善的脂肪指标。结论:在CureGN的成年患者中,体重指数(BMI)是一个不完善的肥胖指标:结论:在 CureGN 的成年患者中,2/3 级肥胖与心血管疾病相关,但在对潜在混杂因素进行调整后,与肾脏疾病无关。
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来源期刊
American Journal of Kidney Diseases
American Journal of Kidney Diseases 医学-泌尿学与肾脏学
CiteScore
20.40
自引率
2.30%
发文量
732
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Kidney Diseases (AJKD), the National Kidney Foundation's official journal, is globally recognized for its leadership in clinical nephrology content. Monthly, AJKD publishes original investigations on kidney diseases, hypertension, dialysis therapies, and kidney transplantation. Rigorous peer-review, statistical scrutiny, and a structured format characterize the publication process. Each issue includes case reports unveiling new diseases and potential therapeutic strategies.
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