Cancer patterns and association with mortality and renal outcomes in non-dialysis dependent chronic kidney disease: a matched cohort study
Name:
document(1).pdf
Size:
796.2Kb
Format:
PDF
Description:
Full text, Open Access article
Affiliation
Department of Renal Medicine, Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust, M6 8HD, Salford, UK.Issue Date
2019
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
BACKGROUND: Cancer in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) is an added burden to their overall morbidity and mortality. Cancer can be a cause or an effect of CKD. In CKD patients, a better understanding of cancer distribution and associations can aid in the proper planning of renal replacement therapy (RRT) and in the choice of chemotherapeutic agents, many of which are precluded in more advanced CKD. This study aims to investigate the distribution and the association of cancer with mortality, renal progression and RRT assignment in a non-dialysis dependent CKD cohort, few studies have investigated this in the past. METHODS: The study was carried out on 2952 patients registered in the Salford Kidney Study (SKS) between October 2002 and December 2016. A comparative analysis was performed between 339 patients with a history of cancer (previous and current) and 2613 patients without cancer at recruitment. A propensity score matched cohort of 337 patients was derived from each group and used for analysis. Cox-regression models and Kaplan-Meier estimates were used to compare the association of cancer with mortality and end-stage renal disease (ESRD) outcomes. Linear regression analysis was applied to generate the annual rate of decline in estimated glomerular filtration rate (delta eGFR). RESULTS: Of our cohort, 13.3% had a history of cancer at recruitment and the annual rate of de novo cancers in the non-cancer patients was 1.6%. Urogenital cancers including kidney and bladder, and prostate and testicle in males, ovary and uterus in females, were the most prevalent cancers (46%), as expected from the anatomical or physiological roles of these organs and relationship to nephrology. Over a median follow-up of 48?months, 1084 (36.7%) of patients died. All-cause mortality was higher in the previous and current cancer group (49.6% vs 35%, p?<?0.001), primarily because of cancer-specific mortality. Multivariate Cox regression analysis showed a strong association of cancer with all-cause mortality (HR:1.41; 95%CI: 1.12-1.78; p?=?0.004). There was no difference between the groups regarding reaching end-stage renal disease (26% in both groups) or the rate of decline in eGFR (-?0.97 for cancer vs -?0.93?mL/min/year for non-cancer, p?=?0.93). RRT uptake was similar between the groups (17.2% vs 19.3%, p?=?0.49). CONCLUSIONS: Cancer status proved to be an added burden and an independent risk factor for all-cause mortality but not for renal progression. CKD patients with a previous or current history of cancer should be assessed on a case by case basis in planning for renal replacement therapy options, and the presence of cancer should not be a limitation for RRT provision including transplantation.Citation
Chinnadurai R, Flanagan E, Jayson GC, Kalra PA. Cancer patterns and association with mortality and renal outcomes in non-dialysis dependent chronic kidney disease: a matched cohort study. BMC Nephrol. 2019;20(1):380.Journal
BMC NephrologyDOI
10.1186/s12882-019-1578-5PubMed ID
31640599Additional Links
https://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12882-019-1578-5Type
ArticleLanguage
enae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1186/s12882-019-1578-5
Scopus Count
Collections
Related articles
- Associations of urological malignancies with renal progression and mortality in advanced chronic kidney disease: a propensity-matched cohort study.
- Authors: Chinnadurai R, Clarke NW, Kalra PA
- Issue date: 2020 May 29
- Progression and outcomes of non-dialysis dependent chronic kidney disease patients: A single center longitudinal follow-up study.
- Authors: Khan YH, Sarriff A, Adnan AS, Khan AH, Mallhi TH, Jummaat F
- Issue date: 2017 Jan
- Distribution and association of cancer with mortality in end-stage renal disease patients receiving dialysis.
- Authors: Chinnadurai R, Flanagan E, Kalra PA
- Issue date: 2019 Dec
- Association between non-malignant monoclonal gammopathy and adverse outcomes in chronic kidney disease: A cohort study.
- Authors: Fenton A, Chinnadurai R, Gullapudi L, Kampanis P, Dasgupta I, Ritchie J, Harding S, Ferro CJ, Kalra PA, Taal MW, Cockwell P
- Issue date: 2020 Feb
- Low renal replacement therapy incidence among slowly progressing elderly chronic kidney disease patients referred to nephrology care: an observational study.
- Authors: Lundström UH, Gasparini A, Bellocco R, Qureshi AR, Carrero JJ, Evans M
- Issue date: 2017 Feb 10