Progression to Overt Nephropathy in Type 2 Diabetes

Author:

Bruno Graziella1,Merletti Franco2,Biggeri Annibale3,Bargero Giuseppe4,Ferrero Stefania1,Pagano Gianfranco1,Perin Paolo Cavallo1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine, Turin University, Turin, Italy

2. Unit of Cancer Epidemiology, Turin University, Turin, Italy

3. Department of Statistics G. Parenti, Florence University, Florence, Italy

4. Santo Spirito Hospital, Casale Monferrato, Alessandria, Italy

Abstract

OBJECTIVE—The first sign of diabetic nephropathy is microalbuminuria, but its predictive role of progression to overt nephropathy in type 2 diabetes has not yet been clarified. The aims of this study were to assess during 7 years of follow-up the incidence rate of overt nephropathy and the predictive role of microalbuminuria and other baseline variables (blood pressure, lipids, fibrinogen, uric acid, smoking, and HbA1c cumulative average during follow-up). RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—A prospective population-based study was performed in Casale Monferrato, Italy, including 1,253 type 2 diabetic patients recruited at baseline (1991–1992), 765 with normoalbuminuria (albumin excretion rate [AER] <20 μg/min) and 488 with microalbuminuria (AER 20–200 μg/min). All measurements were centralized. A nested case-control study within the cohort was performed, selecting four control subjects, frequency matched for age and attained individual time of follow-up with each case. Conditional regression analysis was performed to assess variables independently associated with risk of progression to overt nephropathy. RESULTS—Of 1,253 total patients, 1,103 (88.0%) were included in the follow-up examination (median 5.33 years); their age and duration of disease at baseline were 68.4 ± 10.5 years and 10.4 ± 6.6 years, respectively. Cases of overt nephropathy were 202, giving an incidence rate of 37.0/1,000 person-years (95% CI 32.3–42.6). In conditional logistic regression analyses, microalbuminuria provided a 42% increased risk with respect to normoalbuminuria (95% CI 0.98–2.06), independently of duration of diabetes, hypertension, and systolic blood pressure. Other variables independently associated with progression to overt nephropathy were HbA1c cumulative average (P = 0.002), apolipoprotein B (P = 0.013), fibrinogen (P = 0.02), and HDL cholesterol (P = 0.03). CONCLUSIONS—Of type 2 diabetic patients, 3.7% progress every year to overt nephropathy. Microalbuminuria is associated with a 42% increased risk of progression to overt nephropathy. Other independent predictors are HbA1c, HDL cholesterol, apolipoprotein B, and fibrinogen.

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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