Department of Surgery, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD; Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD.
Department of Surgery, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD.
Am J Kidney Dis. 2020 Jul;76(1):72-81. doi: 10.1053/j.ajkd.2019.10.014. Epub 2020 Feb 3.
RATIONALE & OBJECTIVE: Intact cognition is generally a prerequisite for navigating through and completing evaluation for kidney transplantation. Despite kidney transplantation being contraindicated for those with severe dementia, screening for more mild forms of cognitive impairment before referral is rare. Candidates may have unrecognized cognitive impairment, which may prolong evaluation, elevate mortality risk, and hinder access to kidney transplantation. We estimated the burden of cognitive impairment and its association with access to kidney transplantation and waitlist mortality.
Prospective cohort study.
SETTING & PARTICIPANTS: 3,630 participants (January 2009 to June 2018) with cognitive function measured (by the Modified Mini-Mental State Examination [3MS]) at kidney transplantation evaluation at 1 of 2 transplantation centers.
Cognitive impairment (3MS score<80).
Listing, waitlist mortality, and kidney transplantation.
We estimated the adjusted chance of listing (Cox regression), risk for waitlist mortality (competing-risks regression), and kidney transplantation rate (Poisson regression) by cognitive impairment. Given potential differences in cause of cognitive impairment among those with and without diabetes, we tested whether these associations differed by diabetes status using a Wald test.
At evaluation, 6.4% of participants had cognitive impairment, which was independently associated with 25% lower chance of listing (adjusted HR, 0.75; 95% CI, 0.61-0.91); this association did not differ by diabetes status (P=0.07). There was a nominal difference by diabetes status for the association between cognitive impairment and kidney transplantation rate (P=0.05), while the association between cognitive impairment and waitlist mortality differed by diabetes status kidney transplantation rates (P=0.02). Among candidates without diabetes, those with cognitive impairment were at 2.47 (95% CI, 1.31-4.66) times greater risk for waitlist mortality; cognitive impairment was not associated with this outcome among candidates with diabetes.
Single measure of cognitive impairment.
Cognitive impairment is associated with a lower chance of being placed on the waitlist, and among patients without diabetes, with increased mortality on the waitlist. Future studies should investigate whether implementation of screening for cognitive impairment improves these outcomes.
认知功能完整通常是接受肾脏移植评估和完成评估的前提条件。尽管严重痴呆患者不适合进行肾脏移植,但在转诊前对更轻微的认知障碍进行筛查却很少见。患者可能存在未被识别的认知障碍,这可能会延长评估时间、增加死亡率,并阻碍他们获得肾脏移植的机会。本研究旨在评估认知障碍的负担及其与接受肾脏移植和等待移植名单期间死亡率的关系。
前瞻性队列研究。
2009 年 1 月至 2018 年 6 月,在这 2 家移植中心中的 1 家接受肾脏移植评估时,通过改良的简易精神状态检查(3MS)对 3630 名参与者的认知功能进行了测量。
认知障碍(3MS 评分<80)。
在评估时,6.4%的参与者存在认知障碍,认知障碍与列入名单的机会降低 25%独立相关(调整后的 HR,0.75;95%CI,0.61-0.91);这种关联在糖尿病患者和非糖尿病患者之间没有差异(P=0.07)。认知障碍与肾脏移植率之间的关联在糖尿病状态方面存在名义差异(P=0.05),而认知障碍与等待移植名单期间死亡率之间的关联则因糖尿病状态下的肾脏移植率而异(P=0.02)。在没有糖尿病的患者中,认知障碍患者等待名单期间的死亡率风险增加 2.47 倍(95%CI,1.31-4.66);在患有糖尿病的患者中,认知障碍与这一结果无关。
仅评估认知障碍的单一指标。
认知障碍与列入等待名单的机会降低相关,在没有糖尿病的患者中,认知障碍与等待名单期间的死亡率增加相关。未来的研究应探讨实施认知障碍筛查是否能改善这些结果。