急性肾损伤后纵向生物标志物与肾脏疾病进展。
Longitudinal biomarkers and kidney disease progression after acute kidney injury.
机构信息
Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Section of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
出版信息
JCI Insight. 2023 May 8;8(9):e167731. doi: 10.1172/jci.insight.167731.
BACKGROUNDLongitudinal investigations of murine acute kidney injury (AKI) suggest that injury and inflammation may persist long after the initial insult. However, the evolution of these processes and their prognostic values are unknown in patients with AKI.METHODSIn a prospective cohort of 656 participants hospitalized with AKI, we measured 7 urine and 2 plasma biomarkers of kidney injury, inflammation, and tubular health at multiple time points from the diagnosis to 12 months after AKI. We used linear mixed-effect models to estimate biomarker changes over time, and we used Cox proportional hazard regressions to determine their associations with a composite outcome of chronic kidney disease (CKD) incidence and progression. We compared the gene expression kinetics of biomarkers in murine models of repair and atrophy after ischemic reperfusion injury (IRI).RESULTSAfter 4.3 years, 106 and 52 participants developed incident CKD and CKD progression, respectively. Each SD increase in the change of urine KIM-1, MCP-1, and plasma TNFR1 from baseline to 12 months was associated with 2- to 3-fold increased risk for CKD, while the increase in urine uromodulin was associated with 40% reduced risk for CKD. The trajectories of these biological processes were associated with progression to kidney atrophy in mice after IRI.CONCLUSIONSustained tissue injury and inflammation, and slower restoration of tubular health, are associated with higher risk of kidney disease progression. Further investigation into these ongoing biological processes may help researchers understand and prevent the AKI-to-CKD transition.FUNDINGNIH and NIDDK (grants U01DK082223, U01DK082185, U01DK082192, U01DK082183, R01DK098233, R01DK101507, R01DK114014, K23DK100468, R03DK111881, K01DK120783, and R01DK093771).
背景
对小鼠急性肾损伤 (AKI) 的纵向研究表明,损伤和炎症可能在初始损伤后持续很长时间。然而,这些过程的演变及其在 AKI 患者中的预后价值尚不清楚。
方法
在一项前瞻性队列研究中,我们纳入了 656 名因 AKI 住院的患者,在 AKI 诊断后至 12 个月,我们多次测量了 7 种尿液和 2 种血浆生物标志物,以评估肾脏损伤、炎症和管状健康的变化情况。我们使用线性混合效应模型来估计生物标志物随时间的变化,并使用 Cox 比例风险回归来确定它们与慢性肾脏病 (CKD) 发生率和进展的复合结局之间的关系。我们比较了修复和萎缩模型中生物标志物的基因表达动力学。
结果
4.3 年后,106 名和 52 名患者分别发生新发 CKD 和 CKD 进展。与基线相比,尿液 KIM-1、MCP-1 和血浆 TNFR1 从基线到 12 个月的变化每增加一个标准差,与 CKD 的风险增加 2-3 倍相关,而尿液尿调蛋白的增加与 CKD 的风险降低 40%相关。这些生物学过程的轨迹与 IRI 后小鼠向肾脏萎缩的进展相关。
结论
持续的组织损伤和炎症,以及管状健康恢复较慢,与肾脏疾病进展的风险增加相关。对这些持续的生物学过程的进一步研究可能有助于研究人员了解和预防 AKI 向 CKD 的转变。
资金来源
NIH 和 NIDDK(U01DK082223、U01DK082185、U01DK082192、U01DK082183、R01DK098233、R01DK101507、R01DK114014、K23DK100468、R03DK111881、K01DK120783 和 R01DK093771)。