Kidney Medicine (Nov 2023)

Structured Moderate Exercise and Biomarkers of Kidney Health in Sedentary Older Adults: The Lifestyle Interventions and Independence for Elders Randomized Clinical Trial

  • Anoop Sheshadri,
  • Mason Lai,
  • Fang-Chi Hsu,
  • Scott R. Bauer,
  • Shyh-Huei Chen,
  • Warren Tse,
  • Vasantha Jotwani,
  • Gregory J. Tranah,
  • Jennifer C. Lai,
  • Stein Hallan,
  • Roger A. Fielding,
  • Christine Liu,
  • Joachim H. Ix,
  • Steven G. Coca,
  • Michael G. Shlipak

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 11
p. 100721

Abstract

Read online

Rationale & Objective: In the Lifestyle Interventions and Independence for Elders (LIFE) trial, a structured exercise intervention slowed kidney function decline in sedentary older adults. Biomarkers of kidney health could distinguish potential mechanisms for this beneficial effect. Study Design: Randomized controlled trial. Setting & Population: A total of 1,381 sedentary adults aged 70-89 years enrolled in the LIFE trial. Intervention: Structured, 2-year, moderate-intensity exercise intervention versus health education. Outcomes: Physical activity was measured by step count. Primary outcomes were changes in 14 serum and urine biomarkers of kidney health collected at baseline, year 1, and year 2. We determined the effect of randomization on changes in kidney measures and then evaluated observational associations of achieved activity on each measure. Results: Participants assigned to exercise walked on average 291 more steps per day than participants assigned to health education. The intervention was not significantly associated with changes in biomarkers of kidney health. In observational analyses, persons in the highest versus lowest quartile of activity (≥3,470 vs <1,568 steps/day) had significant improvement in urine albumin (mean, −0.22 mg albumin/g urine creatinine [interquartile range (IQR), −0.37 to −0.06]), alpha-1-microglobulin (−0.18 mg/L [−0.28 to −0.08]), trefoil factor-3 (−0.24 pg/mL [−0.35 to −0.13]), epidermal growth factor (0.19 pg/mL [0.06-0.32]), uromodulin (0.06 pg/mL [0.00-0.12]), interleukin 18 (−0.09 pg/mL [−0.15 to −0.03]), neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (−0.16 pg/mL [−0.24 to −0.07]), monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (−0.25 pg/mL [−0.36 to −0.14]), clusterin (-0.16 pg/mL [−0.30 to −0.02]), serum tumor necrosis factor receptor-1 (−0.25 mg/dL [−0.39 to −0.11]) and tumor necrosis factor receptor-2 (−0.30 mg/dL [−0.44 to −0.16]). In sensitivity analyses, incremental changes in activity were most impactful on urine interleukin 18 and serum tumor necrosis factor-1. Limitations: The original study was not designed to assess the impact on kidney health. Non-white individuals and patients with advanced chronic kidney disease are underrepresented. Conclusions: Randomization to structured exercise did not improve kidney health at a group level. However, higher exercise was associated with concurrent improvements in biomarkers of glomerular injury, tubular function/repair, tubular injury, generalized inflammation, and tubulointerstitial repair/fibrosis. Plain-Language Summary: In the Lifestyle Interventions For Elders (LIFE) study, randomization to an exercise and physical activity intervention improved the slope of estimated glomerular filtration rate over 2 years compared with health education among older adults. In this study, we sought to determine whether there were specific biomarkers of kidney health that were affected by the exercise and physical activity intervention to investigate potential mechanisms for this positive impact on kidney decline. We found that randomization to the intervention did not improve any of the 14 measures of kidney tubule health. However, in observational analyses, higher activity was independently associated with improvements in several domains, especially tubular injury and generalized inflammation. These results help to clarify the impact of physical activity on kidney health.

Keywords