PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Malnutrition, inflammation, progression of vascular calcification and survival: Inter-relationships in hemodialysis patients.

  • Sun Ryoung Choi,
  • Young-Ki Lee,
  • A Jin Cho,
  • Hayne Cho Park,
  • Chae Hoon Han,
  • Myung-Jin Choi,
  • Ja-Ryong Koo,
  • Jong-Woo Yoon,
  • Jung Woo Noh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0216415
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 5
p. e0216415

Abstract

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Background and aimsMalnutrition and inflammation are closely linked to vascular calcification (VC), the severity of which correlate with adverse outcome. However, there were few studies on the interplay between malnutrition, inflammation and VC progression, rather than VC presence per se. We aimed to determine the relationship of malnutrition, inflammation, abdominal aortic calcification (AAC) progression with survival in hemodialysis (HD) patients.MethodsMalnutrition and inflammation were defined as low serum albumin (ResultsAAC progressed in 54.6% of 97 patients (mean age 58.2±11.7 years, 41.2% men) at 1-year follow-up. Hypoalbuminemia (Odds ratio 3.296; 95% confidence interval 1.178-9.222), hs-CRP (1.561; 1.038-2.348), low LDL-cholesterol (0.976; 0.955-0.996), and the presence of baseline AAC (10.136; 3.173-32.386) were significant risk factors for AAC progression. During the mean follow-up period of 5.9 years, 38(39.2%) patients died and 27(71.0%) of them died of cardiovascular disease. Multivariate Cox regression analysis adjusted for old age, diabetes, cardiovascular history, and hypoalbuminemia determined that AAC progression was an independent predictor of all-cause mortality (2.294; 1.054-4.994).ConclusionsMalnutrition and inflammation were significantly associated with AAC progression. AAC progression is more informative than AAC presence at a given time-point as a predictor of all-cause mortality in patients on maintenance HD.