Plumb Lucy, Sinha Manish D, Jones Timothy, Redaniel M Theresa, Ridd Matthew J, Owen-Smith Amanda, Caskey Fergus J, Ben-Shlomo Yoav
Population Health Sciences, University of Bristol Medical School, Bristol, United Kingdom.
UK Renal Registry, UK Kidney Association, Bristol, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2025 Feb 10;20(2):e0314084. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0314084. eCollection 2025.
Understanding whether symptoms suggestive of chronic kidney disease (CKD) are reported to primary care before diagnosis may provide opportunities for earlier detection, thus supporting strategies to prevent progression and improve long-term outcomes. Our aim was to determine whether symptoms/signs or consultation frequency recorded in primary care could predict a subsequent diagnosis of chronic kidney disease in children.
We undertook a case-control study within Clinical Practice Research Datalink. Cases were children <21 years with an incident code for severe CKD during the study period (January 2000-September 2018). Controls were matched on age (+/-3 years), sex, and practice-level kidney function testing rate. Conditional logistic regression modelling was used to identify symptoms predictive of severe CKD and differences in consultation frequency in 24- and 6-month timeframes before the index date.
Symptoms predictive of severe CKD in the 24 months before the index date included growth concerns (OR 7.4, 95% CI 3.5, 15.4), oedema (OR 5.7, 95% CI 2.9, 11.2) and urinary tract infection (OR 3.3, 95% CI 2.1, 5.4); within 6 months of the index date, effect estimates and specificity strengthened although sensitivity decreased. Overall, positive predictive value of symptoms was low. Cases consulted more frequently than controls in both timeframes. In combination, symptoms and consultation frequency demonstrated modest discrimination for CKD (c-statistic after bootstrapping 0.70, 95% CI 0.66, 0.73).
Despite increased consultation frequency and several symptoms being associated with severe chronic kidney disease, the positive predictive value of symptoms is low given disease rarity making earlier diagnosis challenging.
了解慢性肾脏病(CKD)的提示症状是否在诊断前就已报告给初级保健机构,可能会带来更早检测的机会,从而支持预防疾病进展和改善长期预后的策略。我们的目的是确定初级保健机构记录的症状/体征或就诊频率是否能够预测儿童随后的慢性肾脏病诊断。
我们在临床实践研究数据链中进行了一项病例对照研究。病例为在研究期间(2000年1月至2018年9月)年龄小于21岁且有严重CKD发病编码的儿童。对照根据年龄(±3岁)、性别和医疗机构层面的肾功能检测率进行匹配。采用条件逻辑回归模型来识别预测严重CKD的症状以及在索引日期前24个月和6个月时间范围内就诊频率的差异。
在索引日期前24个月,预测严重CKD的症状包括生长问题(比值比7.4,95%置信区间3.5,15.4)、水肿(比值比5.7,95%置信区间2.9,11.2)和尿路感染(比值比3.3,95%置信区间2.1,5.4);在索引日期前6个月内,效应估计值和特异性增强,尽管敏感性降低。总体而言,症状的阳性预测值较低。在两个时间范围内,病例的就诊频率均高于对照。症状和就诊频率相结合对CKD的鉴别能力一般(自抽样后的c统计量为0.70,95%置信区间0.66,0.73)。
尽管就诊频率增加且有几种症状与严重慢性肾脏病相关,但鉴于疾病罕见,症状的阳性预测值较低,早期诊断具有挑战性。