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Quantifying duration of proteinuria remission and association with clinical outcome in IgA nephropathy
Authors
M. Canney Barbour, S.J. Zheng, Y. Coppo, R. Zhang, H. Liu, Z.-H. Matsuzaki, K. Suzuki, Y. Katafuchi, R. Reich, H.N. Cattran, D. Russo, M.L. Troyanov, S. Cook, H.T. Roberts, I. Tesar, V. Maixnerova, D. Lundberg, S. Gesualdo, L. Emma, F. Fuiano, L. Beltrame, G. Rollino, C. Amore, A. Camilla, R. Peruzzi, L. Praga, M. Feriozzi, S. Polci, R. Segoloni, G. Colla, L. Pani, A. Piras, D. Angioi, A. Cancarini, G. Ravera, S. Durlik, M. Moggia, E. Ballarin, J. Di Giulio, S. Pugliese, F. Serriello, I. Caliskan, Y. Sever, M. Kilicaslan, I. Locatelli, F. Del Vecchio, L. Wetzels, J.F.M. Peters, H. Berg, U. Carvalho, F. da Costa Ferreira, A.C. Maggio, M. Wiecek, A. Ots-Rosenberg, M. Magistroni, R. Topaloglu, R. Bilginer, Y. D&apos
Publication date
1 January 2021
Publisher
Abstract
Background On the basis of findings of observational studies and a meta-analysis, proteinuria reduction has been proposed as a surrogate outcome in IgA nephropathy. How long a reduction in proteinuria needs to be maintained to mitigate the long-term risk of disease progression is unknown. Methods In this retrospective multiethnic cohort of adult patients with IgA nephropathy, we defined proteinuria remission as a $25% reduction in proteinuria from the peak value after biopsy, and an absolute reduction in proteinuria to,1 g/d. The exposure of interest was the total duration of first remission, treated as a time-varying covariate using longitudinal proteinuria measurements. We used time-dependent Cox proportional hazards regression models to quantify the association between the duration of remission and the primary outcome (ESKD or a 50% reduction in eGFR). Results During a median follow-up of 3.9 years, 274 of 1864 patients (14.7%) experienced the primary outcome. The relationship between duration of proteinuria remission and outcome was nonlinear. Each 3 months in sustained remission up to approximately 4 years was associated with an additional 9% reduction in the risk of disease progression (hazard ratio [HR], 0.91; 95% confidence interval [95% CI], 0.89 to 0.93). Thereafter, each additional 3 months in remission was associated with a smaller, nonsignificant risk reduction (HR, 0.99; 95% CI, 0.96 to 1.03). These findings were robust to multivariable adjustment and consistent across clinical and histologic subgroups. Conclusions Our findings support the use of proteinuria as a surrogate outcome in IgA nephropathy, but additionally demonstrate the value of quantifying the duration of proteinuria remission when estimating the risk of hard clinical endpoints. Copyright © 2021 by the American Society of Nephrology
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Last time updated on 10/02/2023