Polar vasculosis is associated with better kidney outcome in type 2 diabetes with biopsy‐proven diabetic kidney disease: A multicenter cohort study

Author:

Shimizu Miho1ORCID,Furuichi Kengo2,Toyama Tadashi1,Yamanouchi Masayuki3,Hoshino Junichi34,Kitajima Shinji1,Hara Akinori5,Iwata Yasunori1,Sakai Norihiko1,Yuzawa Yukio6,Kitamura Hiroshi7,Sato Hiroshi8,Shibagaki Yugo9,Suzuki Yoshiki10,Uesugi Noriko11,Ueda Yoshihiko12,Kohagura Kentaro13,Samejima Kenichi14,Tsuruya Kazuhiko14,Nishi Shinichi15,Nishino Tomoya16,Makino Hirofumi17,Matsuo Seiichi18,Ubara Yoshifumi3,Yokoyama Hitoshi2,Wada Takashi1,

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nephrology and Laboratory Medicine, Graduate School of Medical Sciences Kanazawa University Kanazawa Japan

2. Department of Nephrology Kanazawa Medical University Uchinada Japan

3. Nephrology Center Toranomon Hospital Tokyo Japan

4. Department of Nephrology Tokyo Women's Medical University Tokyo Japan

5. Department of Hygiene and Public Health, Graduate School of Medical Sciences Kanazawa University Kanazawa Japan

6. Fujita Health University Toyoake Japan

7. Department of Pathology National Hospital Organization Chiba‐Higashi National Hospital Chiba Japan

8. JR Sendai Hospital Sendai Japan

9. Division of Nephrology, Department of Internal Medicine St Marianna University School of Medicine Kawasaki Japan

10. Division of Clinical Nephrology and Rheumatology Niigata University Medical and Dental Hospital Niigata Japan

11. Department of Pathology Fukuoka University Fukuoka Japan

12. Department of Pathology Dokkyo Medical University Saitama Medical Center Koshigaya Japan

13. Dialysis Unit University of the Ryukyus Hospital Nakagami‐gun Japan

14. Department of Nephrology Nara Medical University Kashihara Japan

15. Division of Nephrology and Kidney Center Kobe University Graduate School of Medicine School of Medicine Kobe Japan

16. Department of Nephrology Nagasaki University Hospital Nagasaki Japan

17. Okayama University Okayama Japan

18. Nagoya University Nagoya Japan

Abstract

ABSTRACTAims/IntroductionThis multicenter cohort study retrospectively assessed the association between polar vasculosis and the progression of diabetic kidney disease (DKD) in type 2 diabetes.Materials and MethodsWe enrolled 811 patients with type 2 diabetes, biopsy‐proven DKD, and proteinuria (≥0.15 g/g creatinine [g/day]). The association between polar vasculosis and other kidney lesions was explored. The outcome was DKD progression defined as a composite of renal replacement therapy initiation or 50% decline in estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) from baseline.ResultsOf the 811 cases, 677 (83.5%) had polar vasculosis. In multivariate logistic regression analysis, subendothelial widening of the glomerular basement membrane, glomerulomegaly, glomerular class in the Renal Pathology Society classification ≥IIb, vascular lesions, age, eGFR, and hemoglobin A1c were positively associated with polar vasculosis, whereas interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy (IFTA) was negatively associated with polar vasculosis. During a median follow‐up of 5.2 years, progression of DKD occurred in 322 of 677 (7.4 events/100 person‐years) and 79 of 134 (11.4 events/100 person‐years) cases with and without polar vasculosis, respectively. Kaplan–Meier analysis showed that polar vasculosis was associated with lower cumulative incidences of DKD progression. Multivariate Cox regression analyses showed that polar vasculosis was associated with a lower risk of DKD progression, regardless of eGFR or proteinuria subgroups. These associations between polar vasculosis and better kidney outcome were unchanged considering all‐cause mortality before DKD progression as a competing event.ConclusionsThis study showed that polar vasculosis of DKD was associated with less advanced IFTA and a better kidney outcome in type 2 diabetes with proteinuria.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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