4.7 Article

Filtration Markers May Have Prognostic Value Independent of Glomerular Filtration Rate

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEPHROLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 2, Pages 351-359

Publisher

AMER SOC NEPHROLOGY
DOI: 10.1681/ASN.2011070663

Keywords

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Funding

  1. CKD-EPI [UO1 DK 053869, UO1 DK 067651, UO1 DK 35073]
  2. KRESCENT
  3. Kidney Foundation of Canada
  4. Canadian Institute of Health Research
  5. Canadian Society of Nephrology
  6. [K24 DK078204]
  7. [K23DK081017]

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Serum levels of creatinine, cystatin C, or beta trace protein allow estimation of GFR, but whether these markers contribute additional prognostic information beyond that reflected in GFR is unknown. Here, we analyzed data from the Modification of Diet in Renal Disease study, which provided baseline levels of these markers for 816 participants with a median follow-up of 16.6 years. We examined associations between the reciprocals of these filtration markers and I-125 iothalamate GFR, expressed per SD, with kidney failure and mortality. In univariate analysis, lower GFR and higher levels of each filtration marker associated with a higher risk for all outcomes. After adjustment for GFR in a Cox proportional hazards model, higher creatinine associated with a higher risk for kidney failure but a lower risk for all-cause mortality. Higher cystatin C and beta trace protein associated with a higher risk for both kidney failure and all-cause mortality. In models including either cystatin C or beta trace protein, the association of GFR with all-cause mortality was no longer significant after the addition of the filtration marker, suggesting the possibility of multicollinearity. In summary, after adjustment for GFR, levels of creatinine, cystatin C, and beta trace protein, each remained directly associated with kidney failure but differed with respect to their associations with mortality. These differences may be a result of non-GFR related associations of filtration markers, residual confounding by GFR, or collinearity between the filtration markers and GFR. beta trace protein and cystatin C seem to provide more consistent prognostic information than creatinine.

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