BMJ Open Diabetes Research & Care (Oct 2021)

Two-year longitudinal trajectory patterns of albuminuria and subsequent rates of end-stage kidney disease and all-cause death: a nationwide cohort study of biopsy-proven diabetic kidney disease

  • Hirofumi Makino,
  • Kengo Furuichi,
  • Yuta Yamamura,
  • Megumi Oshima,
  • Tadashi Toyama,
  • Takashi Wada,
  • Masayuki Yamanouchi,
  • Junichi Hoshino,
  • Yoshifumi Ubara,
  • Hitoshi Yokoyama,
  • Miho Shimizu,
  • Hiroshi Kitamura,
  • Norihiko Sakai,
  • Yasunori Iwata,
  • Shinji Kitajima,
  • Akinori Hara,
  • Yukio Yuzawa,
  • Yoshiki Suzuki,
  • Hiroshi Sato,
  • Noriko Uesugi,
  • Yoshihiko Ueda,
  • Shinichi Nishi,
  • Tomoya Nishino,
  • Kenichi Samejima,
  • Kentaro Kohagura,
  • Yugo Shibagaki,
  • Seiichi Matsuo,
  • Yuki Oba,
  • Shusaku Matsuoka,
  • Daisuke Ikuma,
  • Hiroki Mizuno,
  • Tatsuya Suwabe,
  • Naoki Sawa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjdrc-2021-002241
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1

Abstract

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Introduction Data on the association between longitudinal trajectory patterns of albuminuria and subsequent end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) and all-cause mortality in diabetic kidney disease (DKD) are sparse.Research design and methods Drawing on nationally representative data of 329 patients with biopsy-proven DKD and an estimated glomerular filtration rate above 30 mL/min/1.73 m2 at the time of biopsy, we used joint latent class mixed models to identify different 2-year trajectory patterns of urine albumin to creatinine ratio (UACR) and assessed subsequent rates of competing events: ESKD and all-cause death.Results A total of three trajectory groups of UACR were identified: ‘high-increasing’ group (n=254; 77.2%), ‘high-decreasing’ group (n=24; 7.3%), and ‘low-stable’ group (n=51; 15.5%). The ‘low-stable’ group had the most favorable risk profile, including the baseline UACR (median (IQR) UACR (mg/g creatinine): ‘low-stable’, 109 (50–138); ‘high-decreasing’, 906 (468–1740); ‘high-increasing’, 1380 (654–2502)), and had the least subsequent risk of ESKD and all-cause death among the groups. Although there were no differences in baseline characteristics between the ‘high-decreasing’ group and the ‘high-increasing’ group, the ‘high-decreasing’ group had better control over blood pressure, blood glucose, and total cholesterol levels during the first 2 years of follow-up, and the incidence rates of subsequent ESKD and all-cause death were lower in the ‘high-decreasing’ group compared with the ‘high-increasing’ group (incidence rate of ESKD (per 1000 person-years): 32.7 vs 77.4, p=0.014; incidence rate of all-cause death (per 1000 person-years): 0.0 vs 25.4, p=0.007).Conclusions Dynamic changes in albuminuria are associated with subsequent ESKD and all-cause mortality in DKD. Reduction in albuminuria by improving risk profile may decrease the risk of ESKD and all-cause death.