Associations Between Characteristics of Individuals With Fontan Circulation With Blood and Urine Biomarkers of Kidney Injury and Dysfunction

丰坦循环患者特征与肾脏损伤和功能障碍的血液和尿液生物标志物之间的关联

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作者:David A Katz, Zhiqian Gao, Joshua Freytag, Arjun Mahendran, Cassandra Szugye, Shalayna Woodly, T Christine E Alvarez, Adam M Lubert, Tarek Alsaied, Stuart L Goldstein, Alexander R Opotowsky

Abstract

Background Fontan circulation is associated with kidney injury and dysfunction, often unappreciated until Fontan circulatory failure. We hypothesized that cystatin C-estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) would identify chronic kidney disease more frequently and that urine kidney injury biomarkers would be higher with declining Fontan physiological features. Methods and Results We enrolled 100 ambulatory individuals. Blood and urinary laboratory measurements were compared with demographics and clinically obtained data. Different eGFR equations were used for individuals aged ≥19 years and <19 years. Chronic kidney disease was defined as eGFR <90 mL/min per 1.73 m2. Median (25th-75th percentile) age was 19 (14-26) years, and 43% were female patients. Cystatin C eGFR detected chronic kidney disease (37%) in more patients than creatinine eGFR (11%). Cystatin C eGFR was positively associated, and skeletal muscle mass was negatively associated, with creatinine eGFR in both univariate (cystatin C eGFR β=0.44±0.12, P=0.0006; skeletal muscle mass β=-0.72±0.32, P=0.03) and multivariable analysis (cystatin C eGFR β=0.43±0.12, P=0.0005; skeletal muscle mass β=-0.69±0.29, P=0.02). Urine neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin concentration correlated with Fontan pressure (r=0.28; P=0.04), ventricular end-diastolic pressure (r=0.28; P=0.04), and body fat mass (r=0.26; P=0.03). Conclusions Cystatin C eGFR identified more kidney dysfunction, likely attributable to creatinine eGFR being confounded by skeletal muscle mass. Elevated urine neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin was associated with worse Fontan hemodynamics and higher percentage body fat, suggesting that higher venous pressure and higher adiposity are associated with ongoing kidney injury.

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