PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

Increased fat mass index is associated with decreased glomerular filtration rate estimated from cystatin C. Data from Malmö Diet and Cancer cohort.

  • Agne Laucyte-Cibulskiene,
  • Peter M Nilsson,
  • Gunnar Engström,
  • Anders Christensson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0271638
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 7
p. e0271638

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundThis study aims to describe associations of obesity and CKD in a Swedish urban population. The impact of fat mass, from bioimpedance analysis, on eGFR based on cystatin C and/or creatinine is studied.Methods5049 participants from Malmö Diet and Cancer Study the cardiovascular arm (MDCS-CV) with available body mass composition (single frequency bioimpedance analysis) and cystatin C measured at baseline were selected. Body mass index (kg/m2) was used to define overweight/obesity. eGFR was calculated using cystatin C (eGFRCYS) and creatinine (eGFRCR) equations: Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration 2012 (CKD-EPICR, CKD-EPICYS, CKD-EPICR-CYS), eGFRCYS based on Caucasian, Asian, pediatric, and adult cohorts (CAPA), the Lund-Malmö revised equation (LMrev), and Modified Full Age Spectrum creatinine-based equation (EKFCCR). Two different fat mass index (FMI) z-scores were calculated: FMI z-scoreLarsson and FMI z-scoreLee.ResultsLower eGFRCYS and eGFRCR-CYS following multiple adjustments were prevalent in overweight/obese subjects. Increase in FMI z-scoreLarsson or FMI z-scoreLee was related to decrease in predicted CAPA, CKD-EPICYS, CKD-EPICR-CYS and CAPA-LMrev equation.ConclusioneGFRCYS, in contrast to combined eGFRCR-CYS and eGFRCR, demonstrate the strongest association between FMI and kidney function.