1. Plasma Biomarkers of Tubular Injury and Inflammation Are Associated with CKD Progression in Children
- Author
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Jason H, Greenberg, Alison G, Abraham, Yunwen, Xu, Jeffrey R, Schelling, Harold I, Feldman, Venkata S, Sabbisetti, Mariana Cardenas, Gonzalez, Steven, Coca, Sarah J, Schrauben, Sushrut S, Waikar, Vasan S, Ramachandran, Michael G, Shlipak, Bradley, Warady, Paul L, Kimmel, Joseph V, Bonventre, Michelle, Denburg, Chirag R, Parikh, and Susan, Furth
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Inflammation ,urologic and male genital diseases ,Plasma biomarkers ,Receptors, Urokinase Plasminogen Activator ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Up Front Matters ,Internal medicine ,Clinical endpoint ,Humans ,Receptors, Tumor Necrosis Factor, Type II ,Medicine ,Chitinase-3-Like Protein 1 ,Hepatitis A Virus Cellular Receptor 1 ,Prospective Studies ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Renal Insufficiency, Chronic ,Child ,Chemokine CCL2 ,Proportional Hazards Models ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,Kidney Tubules ,Quartile ,SuPAR ,Receptors, Tumor Necrosis Factor, Type I ,Nephrology ,Disease Progression ,Etiology ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Biomarkers ,Follow-Up Studies ,Glomerular Filtration Rate ,Cohort study - Abstract
Background After accounting for known risk factors for CKD progression in children, clinical outcomes among children with CKD still vary substantially. Biomarkers of tubular injury (such as KIM-1), repair (such as YKL-40), or inflammation (such as MCP-1, suPAR, TNF receptor-1 [TNFR-1], and TNFR-2) may identify children with CKD at risk for GFR decline. Methods We investigated whether plasma KIM-1, YKL-40, MCP-1, suPAR, TNFR-1, and TNFR-2 are associated with GFR decline in children with CKD and in subgroups defined by glomerular versus nonglomerular cause of CKD. We studied participants of the prospective CKiD Cohort Study which enrolled children with an eGFR of 30-90 ml/min per 1.73 m2 and then assessed eGFR annually. Biomarkers were measured in plasma collected 5 months after study enrollment. The primary endpoint was CKD progression, defined as a composite of a 50% decline in eGFR or incident ESKD. Results Of the 651 children evaluated (median age 11 years; median baseline eGFR of 53 ml/min per 1.73 m2), 195 (30%) had a glomerular cause of CKD. Over a median follow-up of 5.7 years, 223 children (34%) experienced CKD progression to the composite endpoint. After multivariable adjustment, children with a plasma KIM-1, TNFR-1, or TNFR-2 concentration in the highest quartile were at significantly higher risk of CKD progression compared with children with a concentration for the respective biomarker in the lowest quartile (a 4-fold higher risk for KIM-1 and TNFR-1 and a 2-fold higher risk for TNFR-2). Plasma MCP-1, suPAR, and YKL-40 were not independently associated with progression. When stratified by glomerular versus nonglomerular etiology of CKD, effect estimates did not differ significantly. Conclusions Higher plasma KIM-1, TNFR-1, and TNFR-2 are independently associated with CKD progression in children.
- Published
- 2020
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