PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Epidemiology of low-proteinuric chronic kidney disease in renal clinics.

  • Luca De Nicola,
  • Michele Provenzano,
  • Paolo Chiodini,
  • Silvio Borrelli,
  • Luigi Russo,
  • Antonio Bellasi,
  • Domenico Santoro,
  • Giuseppe Conte,
  • Roberto Minutolo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0172241
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2
p. e0172241

Abstract

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CKD patients with low-grade proteinuria (LP) are common in nephrology clinics. However, prevalence, characteristics, and the competing risks of ESRD and death as the specific determinants, are still unknown. We analyzed epidemiological features of LP status in a prospective cohort of 2,340 patients with CKD stage III-V referred from ≥6 months in 40 nephrology clinics in Italy. LP status was defined as proteinuria >ESRD; P = 0.002) versus CON (ESRD>>death; P<0.0001). Modifiable risk factors were also different in LP, with smoking, lower hemoglobin, and proteinuria being associated with higher mortality risk while lower BMI and higher phosphorus predicting ESRD at multivariable Cox analyses [P<0.05 for all]. Therefore, in nephrology clinics, LP patients are the majority and show distinctive basal features. More important, they are more exposed to death than ESRD and do present specific modifiable determinants of either outcome; indeed, in LP, while smoking plays a role for mortality, lower BMI and higher phosphorus levels -even if in the normal range- are predictors of ESRD. These data support the need to further study the low proteinuric CKD population to guide management.