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Global Cardiovascular and Renal Outcomes of Reduced GFR

Bernadette Thomas, +101 more
- 01 Jul 2017 - 
- Vol. 28, Iss: 7, pp 2167-2179
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TLDR
By 2013, cardiovascular deaths attributed to reduced G FR outnumbered ESRD deaths throughout the world, and reduced GFR ranked below high systolic BP, high body mass index, and high fasting plasma glucose as a risk factor for disability-adjusted life years in both developed and developing world regions.
Abstract
The burden of premature death and health loss from ESRD is well described. Less is known regarding the burden of cardiovascular disease attributable to reduced GFR. We estimated the prevalence of reduced GFR categories 3, 4, and 5 (not on RRT) for 188 countries at six time points from 1990 to 2013. Relative risks of cardiovascular outcomes by three categories of reduced GFR were calculated by pooled random effects meta-analysis. Results are presented as deaths for outcomes of cardiovascular disease and ESRD and as disability-adjusted life years for outcomes of cardiovascular disease, GFR categories 3, 4, and 5, and ESRD. In 2013, reduced GFR was associated with 4% of deaths worldwide, or 2.2 million deaths (95% uncertainty interval [95% UI], 2.0 to 2.4 million). More than half of these attributable deaths were cardiovascular deaths (1.2 million; 95% UI, 1.1 to 1.4 million), whereas 0.96 million (95% UI, 0.81 to 1.0 million) were ESRD-related deaths. Compared with metabolic risk factors, reduced GFR ranked below high systolic BP, high body mass index, and high fasting plasma glucose, and similarly with high total cholesterol as a risk factor for disability-adjusted life years in both developed and developing world regions. In conclusion, by 2013, cardiovascular deaths attributed to reduced GFR outnumbered ESRD deaths throughout the world. Studies are needed to evaluate the benefit of early detection of CKD and treatment to decrease these deaths.

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Global, regional, and national burden of chronic kidney disease, 1990–2017: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2017

Boris Bikbov, +221 more
- 29 Feb 2020 - 
TL;DR: The burden of CKD was much higher than expected for the level of development, whereas the disease burden in western, eastern, and central sub-Saharan Africa, east Asia, south Asia, central and eastern Europe, Australasia, and western Europe was lower than expected.
Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis of the Global Burden of Disease study highlights the global, regional, and national trends of chronic kidney disease epidemiology from 1990 to 2016.

TL;DR: The Global Burden of Disease study data and methodologies were used to describe the change in burden of CKD from 1990 to 2016 involving incidence, prevalence, death, and disability-adjusted-life-years (DALYs).
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Cardiovascular Disease in Chronic Kidney Disease: Pathophysiological Insights and Therapeutic Options.

TL;DR: The authors explore the most important interactions between heart rhythm disorders and renal dysfunction while evaluating the ways in which the coexistence of renal dysfunction and cardiac arrhythmia influences the management of both.
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Targeting the progression of chronic kidney disease

TL;DR: The authors review drivers of fibrogenesis, including epithelial cell injury, inflammation, regeneration pathways and factors that promote the AKI-to-CKD transition, and discuss direct targeting of fibrotic pathways and therapeutic approaches that have reportedly decreased kidney fibrosis in preclinical and/or clinical studies.
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Ischemic heart disease

Ito Y
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