You Amy S, Kalantar-Zadeh Kamyar, Obi Yoshitsugu, Novoa Alejandra, Peralta Rene Amel, Streja Elani, Nakata Tracy, Kovesdy Csaba P, Nguyen Danh V, Rhee Connie M
Harold Simmons Center for Chronic Disease Research and Epidemiology, University of California Irvine School of Medicine, Orange, California, USA.
Tibor Rubin Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Long Beach, California, USA.
Kidney Int Rep. 2020 Feb 12;5(5):643-653. doi: 10.1016/j.ekir.2020.02.002. eCollection 2020 May.
Although residual urine output (UOP) is associated with better survival and quality of life in dialysis patients, frequent measurement by 24-hour urine collection is burdensome. We thus sought to examine the association of patients' self-reported residual UOP, as an alternative proxy of measured residual UOP, with mortality risk in a prospective hemodialysis cohort study.
Among 670 hemodialysis patients from the prospective multicenter Malnutrition, Diet, and Racial Disparities in Kidney Disease study, we examined associations of residual UOP, ascertained by patient self-report, with all-cause mortality. Patients underwent protocolized surveys assessing presence and frequency of UOP (absent, every 1-3 days, >1 time per day) every 6 months from 2011 to 2015. We examined associations of baseline and time-varying UOP with mortality using Cox regression.
In analyses of baseline UOP, absence of UOP was associated with higher mortality in expanded case-mix adjusted Cox models (ref: presence of UOP): hazard ratio (HR), 1.78 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.16-2.72). In analyses examining baseline frequency of UOP, point estimates suggested a graded association between lower frequency of UOP and higher mortality, although estimates for UOP every 1 to 3 days did not reach statistical significance (reference: UOP >1 time per day): HR, 1.29 (95% CI, 0.82-2.05) and HR, 1.97 (95% CI, 1.24-3.12) for UOP every 1 to 3 days and absence of UOP, respectively. Similar findings were observed in analyses of time-varying UOP.
In hemodialysis patients, there is a graded association between lower frequency of self-reported UOP and higher mortality. Further studies are needed to determine the clinical impact of more frequent assessment of residual UOP using self-reported methods.
尽管残余尿量(UOP)与透析患者更好的生存率和生活质量相关,但通过24小时尿液收集进行频繁测量很麻烦。因此,在一项前瞻性血液透析队列研究中,我们试图检验患者自我报告的残余UOP(作为测量残余UOP的替代指标)与死亡风险之间的关联。
在来自前瞻性多中心“肾脏疾病中的营养不良、饮食和种族差异”研究的670例血液透析患者中,我们检验了通过患者自我报告确定的残余UOP与全因死亡率之间的关联。从2011年到2015年,患者每6个月接受一次标准化调查,评估UOP的存在情况和频率(无、每1 - 3天一次、每天超过1次)。我们使用Cox回归检验基线和随时间变化的UOP与死亡率之间的关联。
在基线UOP分析中,在扩展病例组合调整的Cox模型中,无UOP与较高死亡率相关(参考:有UOP):风险比(HR)为1.78(95%置信区间[CI],1.16 - 2.72)。在检查基线UOP频率的分析中,点估计表明UOP频率越低与死亡率越高之间存在分级关联,尽管每1至3天有UOP的估计未达到统计学显著性(参考:UOP每天超过1次):每1至3天有UOP和无UOP的HR分别为1.29(95%CI,0.82 - 2.05)和1.97(95%CI,1.24 - 3.12)。在随时间变化的UOP分析中观察到类似结果。
在血液透析患者中,自我报告的UOP频率越低与死亡率越高之间存在分级关联。需要进一步研究以确定使用自我报告方法更频繁评估残余UOP的临床影响。