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Published in: Clinical and Experimental Nephrology 9/2019

01-09-2019 | Obesity | Original article

Dysmetabolic markers predict outcomes in autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease

Authors: Ismail Kocyigit, Fahir Ozturk, Eray Eroglu, Zuleyha Karaca, Ahmet Safa Kaynar, Mustafa Cetin, Bulent Tokgoz, Murat Hayri Sipahioglu, Ruslan Bayramov, Ahmet Sen, Oktay Oymak, Tevfik Ecder, Jonas Axelsson

Published in: Clinical and Experimental Nephrology | Issue 9/2019

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Abstract

Background

Overweight and obesity were recently associated with a poor prognosis in patients with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD). Whether the metabolic consequences of obesity as defined by the metabolic syndrome (MS) are also linked with disease progression remains untested.

Methods

Eligible ADPKD patients with different stages of CKD (n = 105) and 105 non-diabetic controls matched for CKD stage were enrolled in the study. Groups were evaluated at baseline for presence of MS, blood markers of metabolism, homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) score, and biochemical markers of inflammation (hs-CRP, IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α and PON-1). MS was defined according to the National Cholesterol Education Program-Adult Treatment Panel III (NCEP-ATP III). Patients were followed for 12 months and progression defined as a decrease in baseline eGFR > 10%.

Results

MS and hypertension were more prevalent amongst ADPKD patients than in the control group. Meanwhile, markers of inflammation such as hs-CRP (3.63 [3.45–5.17] vs. 4.2 [3.45–8.99] mg/dL; p = 0.014), IL-6 (21.65 [14.1–27.49] vs. 24.9 [16.23–39.4] pg/mL; p = 0.004) and IL-1β (21.33 [15.8–26.4] vs. 26.78 [18.22–35] pg/mL; p < 0.001) levels were all more elevated in ADPKD patients than in non-diabetic CKD subjects. In multivariate analysis having a truncating PKD1 mutation predicted (OR 1.25 [1.09–1.43]; p = 0.002) fulfilling the MS criteria. Finally, ADPKD patients fulfilling MS criteria had a significantly more rapid progression during 12 months of follow-up than did those that did not (OR 3.28 [1.09–9.87]; p = 0.035).

Conclusions

Our data supports the notion that dysmetabolisms part of the ADPKD phenotype and associated with a poor outcome, especially in patients with a truncating PKD1 mutation.
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Metadata
Title
Dysmetabolic markers predict outcomes in autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease
Authors
Ismail Kocyigit
Fahir Ozturk
Eray Eroglu
Zuleyha Karaca
Ahmet Safa Kaynar
Mustafa Cetin
Bulent Tokgoz
Murat Hayri Sipahioglu
Ruslan Bayramov
Ahmet Sen
Oktay Oymak
Tevfik Ecder
Jonas Axelsson
Publication date
01-09-2019
Publisher
Springer Singapore
Published in
Clinical and Experimental Nephrology / Issue 9/2019
Print ISSN: 1342-1751
Electronic ISSN: 1437-7799
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10157-019-01748-z

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