Article

ASN 2010: CKD May Progress Faster in African Americans and Hispanics

Study showing racial differences in rate of kidney function decline may point to new opportunities for kidney disease prevention.

African Americans—along with some groups of Hispanics—have faster rates of decline in kidney function compared to white Americans, according to “Racial Differences in Kidney Function Decline among Persons without Chronic Kidney Disease The Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis,” a study presented Thursday, November 18, 2010, as part of an oral presentation during the American Society of Nephrology 43rd Annual Meeting and Scientific Exposition.

This is an important finding because, according to Carmen A. Peralta, MD, University of California, San Francisco, "Racial/ethnic differences are present early, before chronic kidney disease (CKD) has been established.”

Based on a large nationwide study of heart disease risk factors (the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis), the researchers analyzed data on nearly 5,200 US adults, all with initially normal kidney function. Two different "generalized estimating equations" were used to assess changes in kidney function, based on five-year follow-up data. The study compared white, black, Hispanic, and Chinese Americans to look for possible racial/ethnic differences in the aging-related rate of kidney function decline.

African Americans demonstrated a faster annual rate of decline. By one equation, decline was about 60% faster for African American versus white participants. Peralta said, "The observed differences were not fully explained by traditional risk factors," such as cholesterol levels, body weight, smoking, diabetes, or high blood pressure. Kidney function also declined faster in Hispanic participants, but the effect varied by country of origin. Dominicans had the fastest rate of decline, followed by Puerto Ricans. All other Hispanic subgroups, as well as Chinese Americans, demonstrated a rate of decline in kidney function similar to that of whites.

End-stage renal disease (ESRD) disproportionately affects African-Americans and Hispanics. "Studies have suggested that this is more likely due to faster rates of progression from established CKD," Peralta said. “Whether or not these differences in kidney function decline are present at earlier stages of kidney dysfunction is not well known."

The new results suggest that people of certain racial and ethnic groups may be at risk for faster declines in kidney function, even if they are free from CKD. "This reflects a new opportunity to study how to best identify persons at high risk and to investigate prevention strategies for CKD," Peralta said. The study had some important limitations, especially the fact that kidney function was assessed using estimating equations, rather than measured directly.

Source: American Society of Nephrology

Related Videos
Kimberly A. Davidow, MD: Elucidating Risk of Autoimmune Disease in Childhood Cancer Survivors
Yehuda Handelsman, MD: Insulin Resistance in Cardiometabolic Disease and DCRM 2.0 | Image Credit: TMIOA
4 experts are featured in this series.
4 experts are featured in this series.
Nathan D. Wong, MD, PhD: Growing Role of Lp(a) in Cardiovascular Risk Assessment | Image Credit: UC Irvine
Laurence Sperling, MD: Expanding Cardiologists' Role in Obesity Management  | Image Credit: Emory University
Laurence Sperling, MD: Multidisciplinary Strategies to Combat Obesity Epidemic | Image Credit: Emory University
Schafer Boeder, MD: Role of SGLT2 Inhibitors and GLP-1s in Type 1 Diabetes | Image Credit: UC San Diego
© 2024 MJH Life Sciences

All rights reserved.