Association of serum potassium with decline in residual kidney function in incident hemodialysis patients

Author:

Arif Yousif1,Wenziger Cachet1,Hsiung Jui Ting1,Edward Amanda1,Lau Wei Ling1ORCID,Hanna Ramy M1,Lee Yuji1,Obi Yoshitsugu1,Kovesdy Csaba P23ORCID,Kalantar-Zadeh Kamyar14ORCID,Streja Elani14

Affiliation:

1. Harold Simmons Center for Kidney Disease Research and Epidemiology, Division of Nephrology & Hypertension, University of California Irvine Medical Center , Orange, CA , USA

2. Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, University of Tennessee Health Science Center , Memphis, TN , USA

3. Nephrology Section, Memphis Veterans Affairs Medical Center , Memphis, TN , USA

4. Nephrology Section, VA Long Beach Healthcare System , Long Beach, CA , USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Background Hyperkalemia is associated with kidney function decline in patients with non-dialysis dependent chronic kidney disease, but this relationship is unclear for residual kidney function (RKF) among hemodialysis (HD) patients. Methods We conducted a retrospective cohort study of 6655 patients, who started HD January 2007 and December 2011 and who had data on renal urea clearance (KRU). Serum potassium levels were stratified into four groups (i.e. ≤4.0, >4.0 to ≤4.5, >4.5 to ≤5.0 and >5.0 mEq/L) and 1-year KRU slope for each group was estimated by a linear mixed-effects model. Results Higher serum potassium was associated with a greater decline in KRU, and the greatest decrease in KRU (–0.20, 95% confidence interval –0.50 to –0.06) was observed for baseline potassium >5.0 mEq/L in the fully adjusted model. Mediation analysis showed that KRU slope mediated 1.78% of the association between serum potassium and mortality. Conclusions Hyperkalemia is associated with a decline in RKF amongst incident HD patients. These findings may have important clinical implications in the management of hyperkalemia in advanced CKD if confirmed in additional clinical trials.

Funder

Institute of Clinical and Translational Sciences

National Institutes of Health

NIDDK

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Transplantation,Nephrology

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