Journal of Clinical Medicine (Sep 2018)

Effects of Statin Use in Advanced Chronic Kidney Disease Patients

  • Tao-Min Huang,
  • Vin-Cent Wu,
  • Yu-Feng Lin,
  • Jian-Jhong Wang,
  • Chih-Chung Shiao,
  • Likwang Chen,
  • Shih-Chieh Jeff Chueh,
  • Eric Chueh,
  • Shao-Yu Yang,
  • Tai-Shuan Lai,
  • Shuei-Liong Lin,
  • Tzong-Shinn Chu,
  • Kwan-Dun Wu,
  • On Behalf of the National Taiwan University Hospital Study Group on Acute Renal Failure (NSARF)

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm7090285
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 9
p. 285

Abstract

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Although statin treatment is recommended for patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) stages I–IV, its potential benefits have not been reported in advanced CKD patients. Non-diabetic patients with advanced CKD (pre-dialysis patients, estimated glomerular filtration rate <15 mL/min/1.73 m2) were enrolled from a National Health Insurance Research Database with a population of 23 million. Statin users and non-users were matched using propensity scoring and analyzed using Cox proportional hazards models, taking mortality as a competing risk with subsequent end-stage renal disease (ESRD) and statin doses as time-dependent variables. A total of 2551 statin users and 7653 matched statin non-users were identified from a total 14,452 patients with advanced CKD. Taking mortality as a competing risk, statin use did not increase the risk of new-onset diabetes mellitus (NODM) or decrease the risk of de novo major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE), but reduced all-cause mortality (hazard ratio (HR) = 0.59 [95% CI 0.42–0.84], p = 0.004) and sepsis-related mortality (HR = 0.53 [95% CI 0.32–0.87], p = 0.012). For advanced CKD patients, statin was neither associated with increased risks of developing NODM, nor with decreased risk of de novo MACE occurrence, but with a reduced risk of all-cause mortality, mainly septic deaths.

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