Excessive Urinary Albumin Levels Are Associated With Future Cardiovascular Mortality in Postmenopausal Women

Author:

Roest Mark1,Banga Jan Dirk1,Janssen Wilbert M. T.1,Grobbee Diederick E.1,Sixma Jan J.1,de Jong Paul E.1,de Zeeuw Dick1,van der Schouw Yvonne T.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Julius Center for Patient Oriented Research (M.R., D.E.G., Y.T.v.d.S.), the Department of Hematology (M.R., J.D.B.), Graduate School of Biomembranes, and the Department of Internal Medicine (M.R., J.J.S.), Utrecht University Medical School, Utrecht, the Netherlands, and the Department of Internal Medicine (W.M.T.J., P.E.d.J.), Division of Nephrology, and the Department of Clinical Pharmacology (W.M.T.J., D.d.Z.), University Hospital Groningen, Groningen, the Netherlands.

Abstract

Background —Microalbuminuria is an early predictor of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, in both diabetic patients and hypertensive patients. Little is known about the relation of microalbuminuria to cardiovascular disease in women of the general population. Methods and Results —We have studied the relation of urinary albumin levels to cardiovascular mortality in a cohort study of 12 239 postmenopausal women living in Utrecht, the Netherlands. The initial age was between 52 and 67 years. Women were followed on vital status between 1976 and 1995 (168 513 women-years). Albumin was determined in the urine of 561 cases and 557 controls. Data were analyzed by using a nested case-control design. The cardiovascular mortality rate (95% CI) for women who were in the highest quintile of urinary albumin levels was 13.2/1000 years (8.1 to 20.9) compared with 2.6/1000 years (2.3 to 3.1) in women without detectable urinary albumin. The age-adjusted rate ratio (95% CI) between these groups was 4.4 (2.6 to 7.6). Conclusions —This is the first large cohort study that confirms a predictive role of urinary albumin for the risk of future cardiovascular mortality independent of hypertension and diabetes. Our findings support the hypothesis that microalbuminuria is a reflection of vascular damage and a marker of early arterial disease in women from the general population.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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