학술논문

Are there sex differences in cardiovascular outcomes in non-dialysis CKD patients?
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Clinical Kidney Journal. November 2023, Vol. 16 Issue 11, p2141, 6 p.
Subject
Diseases
Analysis
Risk factors
Patient outcomes
Mortality -- Analysis
Chronic kidney failure -- Risk factors -- Patient outcomes
Language
English
ISSN
2048-8505
Abstract
INTRODUCTION Female sex discrepancy and weakness is a 'fact' in anthropological studies that is hard to deny. However, in other fields of science, such as medicine and risk factors, women [...]
Background. Sex differences for cardiovascular (CV) risk and outcomes in chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients not on dialysis have been scarcely or never investigated. We therefore studied this important aspect in a cohort of CKD stage 2-5 in the south of Italy. Methods. We tested the relationship between sex and fatal and non-fatal major CV events in a cohort of 759 stage 2-5 CKD patients followed up for a median time of 36 months. Results. Out of 759 patients, 455 were males (60%) and the remaining 304 patients were females (40%). During the follow-up, 42 patients died, and 118 had fatal and non-fatal CV events. On univariate Cox regression analyses, the male sex failed to be associated with all-cause mortality but was strongly related to the incidence rate of fatal and non-fatal major CV events [hazard ratio (HR) 1.75, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.18-2.60, P = .006]. Data adjustment for a series of major potential confounders did not materially affect the strength of this relationship (HR 1.78, 95% CI 1.03-3.09). Further analysis testing the effect of age on major CV outcomes by sex showed an effect modification by this risk factor on the same outcome (P = .037) because the HR of male versus female CV events increased progressively with aging. Conclusion. Male patients in stage G2-5 CKD had a higher risk for CV events compared with female patients. Age was shown to be a risk modifier for the association between sex and CV events and this risk increased linearly across a wide age spectrum in CKD patients. Keywords: cardiovascular disease, CKD, female, risk assessment, risk difference