학술논문
Impact of CKD on Household Income
Document Type
article
Author
Rachael L. Morton; Iryna Schlackow; Alastair Gray; Jonathan Emberson; William Herrington; Natalie Staplin; Christina Reith; Kirsten Howard; Martin J. Landray; Alan Cass; Colin Baigent; Borislava Mihaylova; R. Collins; C. Baigent; M.J. Landray; C. Bray; Y. Chen; A. Baxter; A. Young; M. Hill; C. Knott; A. Cass; B. Feldt-Rasmussen; B. Fellström; D.E. Grobbee; C. Grönhagen-Riska; M. Haas; H. Holdaas; L.S. Hooi; L. Jiang; B. Kasiske; U. Krairittichai; A. Levin; Z.A. Massy; V. Tesar; R. Walker; C. Wanner; D.C. Wheeler; A. Wiecek; T. Dasgupta; W. Herrington; D. Lewis; M. Mafham; W. Majoni; C. Reith; J. Emberson; S. Parish; D. Simpson; J. Strony; T. Musliner; L. Agodoa; J. Armitage; Z. Chen; J. Craig; D. de Zeeuw; J.M. Gaziano; R. Grimm; V. Krane; B. Neal; V. Ophascharoensuk; T. Pedersen; P. Sleight; J. Tobert; C. Tomson
Source
Kidney International Reports, Vol 3, Iss 3, Pp 610-618 (2018)
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
2468-0249
Abstract
Introduction: The impact of chronic kidney disease (CKD) on income is unclear. We sought to determine whether CKD severity, serious adverse events, and CKD progression affected household income. Methods: Analyses were undertaken in a prospective cohort of adults with moderate-to-severe CKD in the Study of Heart and Renal Protection (SHARP), with household income information available at baseline screening and study end. Logistic regressions, adjusted for sociodemographic characteristics, smoking, and prior diseases at baseline, estimated associations during the 5-year follow-up, among (i) baseline CKD severity, (ii) incident nonfatal serious adverse events (vascular or cancer), and (iii) CKD treatment modality (predialysis, dialysis, or transplanted) at study end and the outcome “fall into relative poverty.” This was defined as household income