Eriksen Bjørn O, Stefansson Vidar T N, Jenssen Trond G, Mathisen Ulla D, Schei Jørgen, Solbu Marit D, Wilsgaard Tom, Melsom Toralf
Metabolic and Renal Research Group, UiT The Arctic University of Norway, Tromsø, Norway.
Section of Nephrology, University Hospital of North Norway, Tromsø, 9038, Norway.
BMC Nephrol. 2017 Feb 28;18(1):77. doi: 10.1186/s12882-017-0496-7.
Hypertension is one of the most important causes of end-stage renal disease, but it is unclear whether elevated blood pressure (BP) also accelerates the gradual decline in the glomerular filtration rate (GFR) seen in the general population with increasing age. The reason may be that most studies have considered only baseline BP and not the effects of changes in BP, antihypertensive treatment and other determinants of GFR during follow-up. Additionally, the use of GFR estimated from creatinine or cystatin C instead of measurements of GFR may have biased the results because of influence from non-GFR related confounders. We studied the relationship between BP and GFR decline using time-varying variables in a cohort representative of the general population using measurements of GFR as iohexol clearance.
We included 1594 subjects aged 50 to 62 years without baseline diabetes, kidney-, or cardiovascular disease in the Renal Iohexol-clearance Survey in Tromsø 6 (RENIS-T6). GFR, BP, antihypertensive medication and all adjustment variables were ascertained at baseline, and at follow-up after a median observation time of 5.6 years in 1299 persons (81%). The relationship between GFR decline and BP was analyzed in linear mixed models.
The mean (standard deviation) GFR decline rate was 0.95 (2.23) mL/min/year. The percentage of persons with hypertension (systolic BP ≥ 140 mmHg, diastolic BP ≥ 90 mmHg or antihypertensive medication) increased from 42 to 52% between baseline and follow-up. In multivariable adjusted linear mixed models using time-varying independent variables measured at baseline and follow-up, higher systolic and diastolic BP were associated with slower GFR decline rates by 0.10 and 0.20 mL/min/year/10 mmHg, respectively (p < 0.05). The association was stronger in persons on antihypertensive medication than in others (p < 0.05 for the interaction between BP and antihypertensive medication).
In the medium-term, elevated BP is not associated with accelerated GFR decline in the general middle-aged population. In persons using antihypertensive medication, elevated BP is associated with a paradoxical slower GFR decline. Studies with even longer observation periods are needed to evaluate the ultimate effect of BP on kidney function.
高血压是终末期肾病的最重要病因之一,但尚不清楚血压升高是否也会加速普通人群随着年龄增长而出现的肾小球滤过率(GFR)逐渐下降。原因可能是大多数研究仅考虑了基线血压,而未考虑随访期间血压变化、降压治疗及其他GFR决定因素的影响。此外,由于非GFR相关混杂因素的影响,使用根据肌酐或胱抑素C估算的GFR而非测量的GFR可能使结果产生偏差。我们在一个代表普通人群的队列中,使用GFR测量值(碘海醇清除率)作为时变变量研究了血压与GFR下降之间的关系。
我们纳入了特罗姆瑟6市肾脏碘海醇清除率调查(RENIS-T6)中1594名年龄在50至62岁之间、无基线糖尿病、肾脏或心血管疾病的受试者。在基线时以及1299名(81%)受试者中位观察时间5.6年后的随访时,确定GFR、血压、降压药物及所有调整变量。在线性混合模型中分析GFR下降与血压之间的关系。
GFR平均(标准差)下降率为0.95(2.23)mL/(min·年)。高血压患者(收缩压≥140 mmHg、舒张压≥90 mmHg或服用降压药物)的比例在基线至随访期间从42%增至52%。在使用基线和随访时测量的时变自变量进行多变量校正的线性混合模型中,收缩压和舒张压升高分别与GFR下降率减慢0.10和0.20 mL/(min·年)/10 mmHg相关(p<0.05)。服用降压药物的人群中这种关联比其他人更强(血压与降压药物之间的交互作用p<0.05)。
在中期,血压升高与普通中年人群GFR加速下降无关。在服用降压药物的人群中,血压升高与GFR下降异常减慢相关。需要进行观察期更长的研究来评估血压对肾功能的最终影响。