4.7 Article

Serum Indoxyl Sulfate Associates with Postangioplasty Thrombosis of Dialysis Grafts

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEPHROLOGY
Volume 27, Issue 4, Pages 1254-1264

Publisher

AMER SOC NEPHROLOGY
DOI: 10.1681/ASN.2015010068

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Taiwan University Hospital, Hsinchu Branch [HCH101-13, HCH102-16, HCH103-14]
  2. National Science Council [NSC103-2314-B-002-183, NSC99-2314-B-010-002-MY3, NSC 102-2314-B-010-004-MY3]
  3. Taipei Veterans General Hospital [VGH-V102B-016, VGH-V102E2-002, V102-C-129]
  4. National Science Council (UST-UCSD International Centre of Excellence in Advanced Bio-engineering) [NSC-100-29114-009-101-A2]
  5. Taipei City Hospital [10101-62-028]
  6. Foundation for Poison Control
  7. Ministry of Education's aim for the Top University Plan in National Yang-Ming University

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Hemodialysis vascular accesses are prone to recurrent stenosis and thrombosis after endovascular interventions. In vitro data suggest that indoxyl sulfate, a protein-bound uremic toxin, may induce vascular dysfunction and thrombosis. However, there is no clinical evidence regarding the role of indoxyl sulfate in hemodialysis vascular access. From January 2010 to June 2013, we prospectively enrolled patients undergoing angioplasty for dialysis access dysfunction. Patients were stratified into tertiles by baseline serum indoxyl sulfate levels. Study participants received clinical follow-up at 6-month intervals until June 2014. Primary end points were restenosis, thrombosis, and failure of vascular access. Median follow-up duration was 32 months. Of the 306 patients enrolled, 262 (86%) had symptomatic restenosis, 153 (50%) had access thrombosis, and 25 (8%) had access failure. In patients with graft access, free indoxyl sulfate tertiles showed a negative association with thrombosis-free patency (thrombosis-free patency rates of 54%, 38%, and 26% for low, middle, and high tertiles, respectively; P=0.001). Patients with graft thrombosis had higher free and total indoxyl sulfate levels. Using multivariate Cox regression analysis, graft thrombosis was independently predicted by absolute levels of free indoxyl sulfate (hazard ratio=1.14; P=0.01) and free indoxyl sulfate tertiles (high versus low, hazard ratio=2.41; P=0.001). Results of this study provide translational evidence that serum indoxyl sulfate is a novel risk factor for dialysis graft thrombosis after endovascular interventions.

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