npj Clean Water (Dec 2021)

Water sources and kidney function: investigating chronic kidney disease of unknown etiology in a prospective study

  • Penny Vlahos,
  • Stephen L. Schensul,
  • Shuchi Anand,
  • Emma Shipley,
  • Saranga Diyabalanage,
  • Chaoran Hu,
  • Toan Ha,
  • Allison Staniec,
  • Lalarukh Haider,
  • Jean J. Schensul,
  • Pasan Hewavitharane,
  • Tudor Silva,
  • Rohana Chandrajith,
  • Nishantha Nanayakkara

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41545-021-00141-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract A chronic Kidney Disease of unknown etiology (CKDu) has emerged with disproportionately high prevalence across dry lowland agricultural communities globally. Here we present the results of a prospective cohort of 293 patients with CKDu in the endemic region of Wilgamuwa, Sri Lanka, in whom we measured baseline kidney function and undertook quarterly follow up over 2 years. Well water was the primary historic drinking water source in the region, although a majority (68%) of participants reported switching to reverse osmosis water during study follow ups. Participants who reported ever drinking from well water had estimated glomerular filtration rates −6.7 (SD: 2.8) ml/min/1.73 m2 lower than participants who did not drink from well water historically (p = 0.0184) during the study period. Geospatial analysis identifies a cluster within the region where CKDu progression is significantly higher than the surrounding area. Samples of household wells (n = 262) indicated 68% had detectable agrochemical compounds with concentration above global water quality standards. It is expected that the detected contaminants compounds are indicators of poor water quality and that there is likely additional agrochemical exposure including commercial additives that may contribute to CKDu onset and/or progression. Thus, our study finds that well water exposure during a person’s lifetime in this region is associated with kidney function decline and identifies and quantifies putative nephrotoxic agrochemicals above safe drinking water concentrations in these wells.