Nonalcoholic Fatty liver disease is independently associated with an increased incidence of chronic kidney disease in patients with type 1 diabetes
Nonalcoholic Fatty liver disease is independently associated with an increased incidence of chronic kidney disease in patients with type 1 diabetes
Objective: there is no information about the role of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) in predicting the development of chronic kidney disease (CKD) in type 1 diabetes.
Research design and methods: we studied 261 type 1 diabetic adults with preserved kidney function and with no macroalbuminuria at baseline, who were followed for a mean period of 5.2 years for the occurrence of incident CKD (defined as estimated glomerular filtration rate [eGFR] <60 mL/min/1.73 m2 and/or macroalbuminuria). NAFLD was diagnosed by ultrasonography.
Results: at baseline, patients had a mean eGFR of 92 ± 23 mL/min/1.73 m2; 234 (89.7%) of them had normoalbuminuria and 27 (10.3%) microalbuminuria. NAFLD was present in 131 (50.2%) patients. During follow-up, 61 subjects developed incident CKD. NAFLD was associated with an increased risk of incident CKD (hazard ratio [HR] 2.85 [95% CI 1.59–5.10]; P < 0.001). Adjustments for age, sex, duration of diabetes, hypertension, A1C, and baseline eGFR did not appreciably attenuate this association (adjusted HR 2.03 [1.10–3.77], P < 0.01). Results remained unchanged after excluding those who had microalbuminuria at baseline (adjusted HR 1.85 [1.03–3.27]; P < 0.05). Addition of NAFLD to traditional risk factors for CKD significantly improved the discriminatory capability of the regression models for predicting CKD (e.g., with NAFLD c statistic 0.79 [95% CI 0.73–0.86] vs. 0.76 [0.71–0.84] without NAFLD, P = 0.002).
Conclusion: this is the first study to demonstrate that NAFLD is strongly associated with an increased incidence of CKD. Measurement of NAFLD improves risk prediction for CKD, independently of traditional cardio-renal risk factors, in patients with type 1 diabetes
1729-1736
Targher, G.
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Mantovani, A.
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Pichiri, I.
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Mingolla, L.
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Cavalieri, V.
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Mantovani, W.
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Pancheri, S.
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Trombetta, M.
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Zoppini, G.
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Chonchol, M.
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Byrne, Christopher D.
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Bonora, E.
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June 2014
Targher, G.
5a842bd2-91c4-4063-b639-da6c681f3698
Mantovani, A.
b1382b57-9c74-44b8-8516-c1d82f2eeb2f
Pichiri, I.
c11e89f0-30d4-4321-991e-935397041fd8
Mingolla, L.
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Cavalieri, V.
1bbe3a5c-b3fb-4900-9645-c4180f50e551
Mantovani, W.
57833b3d-a48a-4deb-956b-be3716380c03
Pancheri, S.
4ce71c0a-4834-48a3-80e4-8cb904a2128b
Trombetta, M.
299b1418-d637-421f-973f-f25c949b4a12
Zoppini, G.
21719d3f-197a-43ba-a955-366ea9ac0764
Chonchol, M.
5cc2151b-c70b-48fb-a3e0-1b2006f6f6ea
Byrne, Christopher D.
1370b997-cead-4229-83a7-53301ed2a43c
Bonora, E.
808afaf8-dcf2-4986-95d2-342691094b8e
Targher, G., Mantovani, A., Pichiri, I., Mingolla, L., Cavalieri, V., Mantovani, W., Pancheri, S., Trombetta, M., Zoppini, G., Chonchol, M., Byrne, Christopher D. and Bonora, E.
(2014)
Nonalcoholic Fatty liver disease is independently associated with an increased incidence of chronic kidney disease in patients with type 1 diabetes.
Diabetes Care, 37 (6), .
(doi:10.2337/dc13-2704).
(PMID:24696459)
Abstract
Objective: there is no information about the role of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) in predicting the development of chronic kidney disease (CKD) in type 1 diabetes.
Research design and methods: we studied 261 type 1 diabetic adults with preserved kidney function and with no macroalbuminuria at baseline, who were followed for a mean period of 5.2 years for the occurrence of incident CKD (defined as estimated glomerular filtration rate [eGFR] <60 mL/min/1.73 m2 and/or macroalbuminuria). NAFLD was diagnosed by ultrasonography.
Results: at baseline, patients had a mean eGFR of 92 ± 23 mL/min/1.73 m2; 234 (89.7%) of them had normoalbuminuria and 27 (10.3%) microalbuminuria. NAFLD was present in 131 (50.2%) patients. During follow-up, 61 subjects developed incident CKD. NAFLD was associated with an increased risk of incident CKD (hazard ratio [HR] 2.85 [95% CI 1.59–5.10]; P < 0.001). Adjustments for age, sex, duration of diabetes, hypertension, A1C, and baseline eGFR did not appreciably attenuate this association (adjusted HR 2.03 [1.10–3.77], P < 0.01). Results remained unchanged after excluding those who had microalbuminuria at baseline (adjusted HR 1.85 [1.03–3.27]; P < 0.05). Addition of NAFLD to traditional risk factors for CKD significantly improved the discriminatory capability of the regression models for predicting CKD (e.g., with NAFLD c statistic 0.79 [95% CI 0.73–0.86] vs. 0.76 [0.71–0.84] without NAFLD, P = 0.002).
Conclusion: this is the first study to demonstrate that NAFLD is strongly associated with an increased incidence of CKD. Measurement of NAFLD improves risk prediction for CKD, independently of traditional cardio-renal risk factors, in patients with type 1 diabetes
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Published date: June 2014
Organisations:
Human Development & Health
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Local EPrints ID: 365290
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/365290
ISSN: 1935-5548
PURE UUID: a291a3fd-78af-4468-9044-22a3869fc749
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Date deposited: 30 May 2014 14:58
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:02
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Author:
G. Targher
Author:
A. Mantovani
Author:
I. Pichiri
Author:
L. Mingolla
Author:
V. Cavalieri
Author:
W. Mantovani
Author:
S. Pancheri
Author:
M. Trombetta
Author:
G. Zoppini
Author:
M. Chonchol
Author:
E. Bonora
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