McQuarrie Emily P, Mackinnon Bruce, Bell Samira, Fleming Stewart, McNeice Valerie, Stewart Graham, Fox Jonathan G, Geddes Colin C
Glasgow Renal and Transplant Unit, Queen Elizabeth University Hospital, Glasgow, UK.
Renal Unit, Ninewells Hospital, Dundee, UK.
Clin Kidney J. 2017 Feb;10(1):49-54. doi: 10.1093/ckj/sfw127. Epub 2017 Jan 7.
: The impact of multiple socio-economic deprivation on patient outcomes in primary renal diseases is unknown. We aimed to assess whether risk of death or requiring renal replacement therapy (RRT) in patients with primary glomerulonephritis (GN) was higher in patients living in an area of multiple socio-economic deprivation. : Patients undergoing native renal biopsy between 2000 and 2014 were identified. Baseline demographics, postcode at time of biopsy, follow-up blood pressure, proteinuria and time to death or RRT were recorded. The Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation (SIMD) is a multidimensional model used to measure deprivation based on postcode. Using SIMD, patients were separated into tertiles of deprivation. A total of 797 patients were included, 64.2% were male with mean age of 54.1 (standard deviation 17.0) years. Median follow-up was 6.3 (interquartile range 3.7-9.4) years during which 174 patients required RRT and 185 patients died. Patients in the most deprived tertile of deprivation were significantly more likely to die than those in the least deprived tertile [hazard ratio (HR) 2.2, P < 0.001], independent of age, baseline serum creatinine and blood pressure. They were not more likely to require RRT (P = 0.22). The increased mortality risk in the most deprived tertile was not uniform across primary renal diseases, with the association being most marked in focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (HR 7.4) and IgA nephropathy (HR 2.7) and absent in membranous nephropathy. : We have demonstrated a significant independent 2-fold increased risk of death in patients with primary GN who live in an area of multiple socio-economic deprivation at the time of diagnosis as compared with those living in less deprived areas.
多种社会经济剥夺对原发性肾脏疾病患者预后的影响尚不清楚。我们旨在评估生活在多重社会经济剥夺地区的原发性肾小球肾炎(GN)患者死亡或需要肾脏替代治疗(RRT)的风险是否更高。
确定了2000年至2014年间接受肾活检的患者。记录了基线人口统计学数据、活检时的邮政编码、随访血压、蛋白尿以及死亡或开始RRT的时间。苏格兰多重剥夺指数(SIMD)是一种基于邮政编码用于衡量剥夺程度的多维度模型。利用SIMD,将患者分为剥夺程度三分位数组。
共纳入797例患者,64.2%为男性,平均年龄54.1(标准差17.0)岁。中位随访时间为6.3(四分位间距3.7 - 9.4)年,在此期间174例患者需要RRT,185例患者死亡。与最不贫困三分位数组的患者相比,最贫困三分位数组的患者死亡可能性显著更高[风险比(HR)2.2,P < 0.001],且与年龄、基线血清肌酐和血压无关。他们需要RRT的可能性并未增加(P = 0.22)。最贫困三分位数组中增加的死亡风险在原发性肾脏疾病中并不一致,在局灶节段性肾小球硬化(HR 7.4)和IgA肾病(HR 2.7)中关联最为明显,而在膜性肾病中不存在这种关联。
我们已经证明,与生活在贫困程度较低地区的原发性GN患者相比,诊断时生活在多重社会经济剥夺地区的患者死亡风险独立显著增加了两倍。