Shapiro Bryan B, Streja Elani, Chen Joline L T, Kovesdy Csaba P, Kalantar-Zadeh Kamyar, Rhee Connie M
Harold Simmons Center for Chronic Disease Research and Epidemiology, Division of Nephrology and Hypertension, University of California Irvine Medical Center, Orange, Calif., USA.
Am J Nephrol. 2014;40(3):224-32. doi: 10.1159/000367903. Epub 2014 Oct 11.
Emerging data suggest that reduced exposure to ultraviolet (UV) radiation is associated with increased mortality in the general population. To date, the association between UV exposure and mortality in dialysis patients has not been examined.
We examined the association between UV index, a proxy of UV exposure, and all-cause mortality among 47,286 US dialysis patients (entry period 2001-2006, with follow-up through 2009) from a large national dialysis organization using multivariable Cox regression. The UV index was ascertained by linking individual patients' residential zip codes to National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration data, and was categorized as low (0-<3), moderate (3-<5), moderate-high (5-<6), high (6-<7), and very-high (≥7). In secondary analyses, we examined the UV index-mortality association within subgroups of age (<65 vs. ≥65 years old), sex, and race (white vs. non-white).
The study population's mean ± SD age was 60 ± 16 and included 46% women and 56% diabetics. Compared to patients residing in moderate-high UV index regions, those residing in high and very-high UV index regions had a lower mortality risk: adjusted HRs 0.84 (95% CI) 0.81-0.88 and 0.83 (95% CI) 0.75-0.91, respectively. A similar inverse association between UV index and mortality was observed across all subgroups, although there was more pronounced reduction in mortality among whites vs. non-whites.
These data suggest that dialysis patients residing in higher UV index regions have lower all-cause mortality compared to those living in moderate-high UV regions. Further studies are needed to determine the mechanisms underlying the UV index-mortality association.
新出现的数据表明,紫外线(UV)辐射暴露减少与普通人群死亡率增加有关。迄今为止,尚未研究透析患者紫外线暴露与死亡率之间的关联。
我们使用多变量Cox回归分析了来自一个大型全国性透析组织的47286名美国透析患者(入组时间为2001 - 2006年,随访至2009年)的紫外线指数(紫外线暴露的一个指标)与全因死亡率之间的关联。通过将个体患者的居住邮政编码与美国国家海洋和大气管理局的数据相链接来确定紫外线指数,并将其分为低(0 - <3)、中(3 - <5)、中高(5 - <6)、高(6 - <7)和非常高(≥7)。在二次分析中,我们研究了年龄(<65岁与≥65岁)、性别和种族(白人与非白人)亚组内紫外线指数与死亡率的关联。
研究人群的平均年龄±标准差为60±16岁,其中女性占46%,糖尿病患者占56%。与居住在中高紫外线指数地区的患者相比,居住在高和非常高紫外线指数地区的患者死亡风险较低:调整后的风险比分别为0.84(95%置信区间)0.81 - 0.88和0.83(95%置信区间)0.75 - 0.91。在所有亚组中均观察到紫外线指数与死亡率之间存在类似的负相关,尽管白人的死亡率下降比非白人更为明显。
这些数据表明,与居住在中高紫外线地区的透析患者相比,居住在较高紫外线指数地区的透析患者全因死亡率较低。需要进一步研究以确定紫外线指数与死亡率关联的潜在机制。