Progression of coronary artery calcification in conventional hemodialysis, nocturnal hemodialysis, and kidney transplantation.

<h4>Introduction</h4>Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in end-stage renal disease (ESRD) and is strongly associated with vascular calcification. An important driver of vascular calcification is high phosphate levels, but these become lower when patients initiate noctur...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Thijs T Jansz, Akin Özyilmaz, Franka E van Reekum, Franciscus T J Boereboom, Pim A de Jong, Marianne C Verhaar, Brigit C van Jaarsveld
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0244639
id doaj-b9bb44e9fbbd4a44b824edd3b03e216b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b9bb44e9fbbd4a44b824edd3b03e216b2021-03-21T05:31:00ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-011512e024463910.1371/journal.pone.0244639Progression of coronary artery calcification in conventional hemodialysis, nocturnal hemodialysis, and kidney transplantation.Thijs T JanszAkin ÖzyilmazFranka E van ReekumFranciscus T J BoereboomPim A de JongMarianne C VerhaarBrigit C van Jaarsveld<h4>Introduction</h4>Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in end-stage renal disease (ESRD) and is strongly associated with vascular calcification. An important driver of vascular calcification is high phosphate levels, but these become lower when patients initiate nocturnal hemodialysis or receive a kidney transplant. However, it is unknown whether nocturnal hemodialysis or kidney transplantation mitigate vascular calcification. Therefore, we compared progression of coronary artery calcification (CAC) between patients treated with conventional hemodialysis, nocturnal hemodialysis, and kidney transplant recipients.<h4>Methods</h4>We measured CAC annually up to 3 years in 114 patients with ESRD that were transplantation candidates: 32 that continued conventional hemodialysis, 34 that initiated nocturnal hemodialysis (≥4x 8 hours/week), and 48 that received a kidney transplant. We compared CAC progression between groups as the difference in square root transformed volume scores per year (ΔCAC SQRV) using linear mixed models. Reference category was conventional hemodialysis.<h4>Results</h4>The mean age of the study population was 53 ±13 years, 75 (66%) were male, and median dialysis duration was 28 (IQR 12-56) months. Median CAC score at enrollment was 171 (IQR 10-647), which did not differ significantly between treatment groups (P = 0.83). Compared to conventional hemodialysis, CAC progression was non-significantly different in nocturnal hemodialysis -0.10 (95% CI -0.77 to 0.57) and kidney transplantation -0.33 (95% CI -0.96 to 0.29) in adjusted models.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Nocturnal hemodialysis and kidney transplantation are not associated with significantly less CAC progression compared to conventional hemodialysis during up to 3 years follow-up. Further studies are needed to confirm these findings, to determine which type of calcification is measured with CAC in end-stage renal disease, and whether that reflects cardiovascular risk.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0244639
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thijs T Jansz
Akin Özyilmaz
Franka E van Reekum
Franciscus T J Boereboom
Pim A de Jong
Marianne C Verhaar
Brigit C van Jaarsveld
spellingShingle Thijs T Jansz
Akin Özyilmaz
Franka E van Reekum
Franciscus T J Boereboom
Pim A de Jong
Marianne C Verhaar
Brigit C van Jaarsveld
Progression of coronary artery calcification in conventional hemodialysis, nocturnal hemodialysis, and kidney transplantation.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Thijs T Jansz
Akin Özyilmaz
Franka E van Reekum
Franciscus T J Boereboom
Pim A de Jong
Marianne C Verhaar
Brigit C van Jaarsveld
author_sort Thijs T Jansz
title Progression of coronary artery calcification in conventional hemodialysis, nocturnal hemodialysis, and kidney transplantation.
title_short Progression of coronary artery calcification in conventional hemodialysis, nocturnal hemodialysis, and kidney transplantation.
title_full Progression of coronary artery calcification in conventional hemodialysis, nocturnal hemodialysis, and kidney transplantation.
title_fullStr Progression of coronary artery calcification in conventional hemodialysis, nocturnal hemodialysis, and kidney transplantation.
title_full_unstemmed Progression of coronary artery calcification in conventional hemodialysis, nocturnal hemodialysis, and kidney transplantation.
title_sort progression of coronary artery calcification in conventional hemodialysis, nocturnal hemodialysis, and kidney transplantation.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description <h4>Introduction</h4>Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in end-stage renal disease (ESRD) and is strongly associated with vascular calcification. An important driver of vascular calcification is high phosphate levels, but these become lower when patients initiate nocturnal hemodialysis or receive a kidney transplant. However, it is unknown whether nocturnal hemodialysis or kidney transplantation mitigate vascular calcification. Therefore, we compared progression of coronary artery calcification (CAC) between patients treated with conventional hemodialysis, nocturnal hemodialysis, and kidney transplant recipients.<h4>Methods</h4>We measured CAC annually up to 3 years in 114 patients with ESRD that were transplantation candidates: 32 that continued conventional hemodialysis, 34 that initiated nocturnal hemodialysis (≥4x 8 hours/week), and 48 that received a kidney transplant. We compared CAC progression between groups as the difference in square root transformed volume scores per year (ΔCAC SQRV) using linear mixed models. Reference category was conventional hemodialysis.<h4>Results</h4>The mean age of the study population was 53 ±13 years, 75 (66%) were male, and median dialysis duration was 28 (IQR 12-56) months. Median CAC score at enrollment was 171 (IQR 10-647), which did not differ significantly between treatment groups (P = 0.83). Compared to conventional hemodialysis, CAC progression was non-significantly different in nocturnal hemodialysis -0.10 (95% CI -0.77 to 0.57) and kidney transplantation -0.33 (95% CI -0.96 to 0.29) in adjusted models.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Nocturnal hemodialysis and kidney transplantation are not associated with significantly less CAC progression compared to conventional hemodialysis during up to 3 years follow-up. Further studies are needed to confirm these findings, to determine which type of calcification is measured with CAC in end-stage renal disease, and whether that reflects cardiovascular risk.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0244639
work_keys_str_mv AT thijstjansz progressionofcoronaryarterycalcificationinconventionalhemodialysisnocturnalhemodialysisandkidneytransplantation
AT akinozyilmaz progressionofcoronaryarterycalcificationinconventionalhemodialysisnocturnalhemodialysisandkidneytransplantation
AT frankaevanreekum progressionofcoronaryarterycalcificationinconventionalhemodialysisnocturnalhemodialysisandkidneytransplantation
AT franciscustjboereboom progressionofcoronaryarterycalcificationinconventionalhemodialysisnocturnalhemodialysisandkidneytransplantation
AT pimadejong progressionofcoronaryarterycalcificationinconventionalhemodialysisnocturnalhemodialysisandkidneytransplantation
AT mariannecverhaar progressionofcoronaryarterycalcificationinconventionalhemodialysisnocturnalhemodialysisandkidneytransplantation
AT brigitcvanjaarsveld progressionofcoronaryarterycalcificationinconventionalhemodialysisnocturnalhemodialysisandkidneytransplantation
_version_ 1714774329854525440