Association between Chronic Kidney Disease-Mineral and Bone Disorder Biomarkers and Symptom Burden in Older Patients with Advanced Chronic Kidney Disease

Author:

Magagnoli Lorenza12ORCID,Cozzolino Mario12ORCID,Evans Marie3ORCID,Caskey Fergus J.4ORCID,Dekker Friedo W.5ORCID,Torino Claudia6ORCID,Szymczak Maciej7ORCID,Drechsler Christiane8ORCID,Pippias Maria49ORCID,Vilasi Antonio6,Janse Roemer J.5ORCID,Krajewska Magdalena7ORCID,Stel Vianda S.1011ORCID,Jager Kitty J.1011ORCID,Chesnaye Nicholas C.1011ORCID,

Affiliation:

1. Department of Health Sciences, University of Milan, Milano, Italy

2. Renal Division, ASST Santi Paolo e Carlo, Milano, Italy

3. Renal Unit, Department of Clinical Intervention and technology (CLINTEC), Karolinska Institutet and Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden

4. Population Health Sciences, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom

5. Department of Clinical Epidemiology, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, The Netherlands

6. IFC-CNR, Clinical Epidemiology and Pathophysiology of Renal Diseases and Hypertension, Reggio Calabria, Italy

7. Department of Nephrology and Transplantation Medicine, Wroclaw Medical University, Wroclaw, Poland

8. Division of Nephrology, University Hospital of Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany

9. Renal Unit, North Bristol NHS Trust, Bristol, United Kingdom

10. Medical Informatics, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

11. Quality of Care, Amsterdam Public Health Research Institute, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Abstract

Key Points In nondialysis patients with advanced CKD, mild-to-moderately increased parathyroid hormone is associated with lower levels of reported symptoms.Phosphate and calcium are not independently associated with overall symptom burden.Patients with both severe hyperphosphatemia and severe hyperparathyroidism had the highest symptom burden. Background Patients with advanced CKD develop numerous symptoms, with a multifactorial origin. Evidence linking mineral disorders (CKD-Mineral and Bone Disorder) and uremic symptoms is scant and mostly limited to dialysis patients. Here, we aim to assess the association between CKD-Mineral and Bone Disorder and symptom burden in nondialysis patients with CKD. Methods We used data from the European Quality study, which includes patients aged ≥65 years with eGFR ≤20 ml/min per 1.73 m2 from six European countries, followed up to 5 years. We used generalized linear mixed-effect models to determine the association between repeated measurements of parathyroid hormone (PTH), phosphate, and calcium with the overall symptom number (0–33), the overall symptom severity (0–165), and the presence of 33 CKD-related symptoms. We also analyzed subgroups by sex, age, and diabetes mellitus and assessed effect mediation and joint effects between mineral biomarkers. Results The 1396 patients included in the study had a mean of 13±6 symptoms at baseline, with a median overall severity score of 32 (interquartile range, 19–50). The association between PTH levels and symptom burden appeared U-shaped with a lower symptom burden found for mild-to-moderately increased PTH levels. Phosphate and calcium were not independently associated with overall symptom burden. The highest symptom burden was found in patients with a combination of both severe hyperparathyroidism and severe hyperphosphatemia (+2.44 symptoms [0.50–4.38], P = 0.01). The association of both hypocalcemia and hyperphosphatemia with symptom burden seemed to differ by sex and age. Conclusions In older patients with advanced CKD not on dialysis, mild-to-moderately increased PTH was associated with a lower symptom burden, although the effect size was relatively small (less than one symptom). Neither phosphate nor calcium were associated with the overall symptom burden, except for the combination of severe hyperphosphatemia and severe hyperparathyroidism which was associated with an increased number of symptoms.

Funder

European Renal Association

Swedish Medical Association

Stockholm County Council ALF Medicine

Center for Innovative Medicine

Italian Society of Nephrology

Dutch Kidney Foundation

Young Investigators grant

National Institute for Health Research

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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