Journal of Diabetes (Jul 2022)

中性粒细胞计数升高与2型糖尿病患者慢性肾脏病变的发展相关

  • Rui Zhang,
  • Jin Chen,
  • Yanqin Xiong,
  • Lihong Wang,
  • Xinmei Huang,
  • Tiange Sun,
  • Bingbing Zha,
  • Yueyue Wu,
  • Cuili Yan,
  • Shufei Zang,
  • Qin Zhou,
  • Zhe Huang,
  • Jun Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/1753-0407.13292
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 7
pp. 442 – 454

Abstract

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Abstract Background This study aims to investigate the potential association of peripheral inflammatory blood cell parameters with the incidence and progression of chronic kidney disease (CKD) in patients with diabetes. Methods The cross‐sectional study included 1192 subjects with diabetes derived from one center. The cohort study included 2060 subjects with diabetes derived from another two centers followed up for 4 years. Logistic regression and Cox proportional hazards models were used to evaluate the association of peripheral inflammatory blood cell with CKD. Results In the cross‐sectional study, neutrophil count performed best as an independent risk factor for CKD (odds ratio 2.556 [95% confidence interval 1.111, 5.879]) even after 1:1 case–control matching for age, gender, history of high blood pressure and duration of diabetes. Spline regression revealed a significant linear association of CKD incidence with continuous neutrophil count in excess of 3.6 × 109/L. In the cohort study, subjects were grouped based on tertile of neutrophil count and neutrophil‐to‐lymphocyte ratio. Cox regression analysis results showed that only neutrophil count was independently associated with CKD progression (the highest group vs. the lowest group, hazard ratio 2.293 [95% confidence interval 1.260, 4.171]) after fully adjusting for potential confounders. The cumulative incidence of CKD progression in patients with diabetes gradually increased with increasing neutrophil count (53 (7.7%) subjects in the lowest group vs. 60 (8.2%) in the middle group vs. 78 (12.2%) in the highest group). Conclusions This study suggested that neutrophil count is an independent risk factor for progression of CKD in patients with diabetes.

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