Predicting coronary heart disease after kidney transplantation: Patient Outcomes in Renal Transplantation (PORT) Study

A K Israni, J J Snyder, M A Skeans, Y Peng, J R Maclean, E D Weinhandl, B L Kasiske, PORT Investigators, Daniel Brennan, Jeffrey Connaire, Ajay Israni, Robert Gaston, John Gill, Christophe Legendre, Henri Kreis, Kai Lopau, Arthur Matas, Bertram Kasiske, Todd Pesavento, Helen Pilmore, John Pirsch, Kazunari Tanabe, Kiyoshi Setoguchi, Armando Torres, Domingo Hernandez, Esteban Porrini, Yves Vanrenterghem, Bruno Watschinger, A K Israni, J J Snyder, M A Skeans, Y Peng, J R Maclean, E D Weinhandl, B L Kasiske, PORT Investigators, Daniel Brennan, Jeffrey Connaire, Ajay Israni, Robert Gaston, John Gill, Christophe Legendre, Henri Kreis, Kai Lopau, Arthur Matas, Bertram Kasiske, Todd Pesavento, Helen Pilmore, John Pirsch, Kazunari Tanabe, Kiyoshi Setoguchi, Armando Torres, Domingo Hernandez, Esteban Porrini, Yves Vanrenterghem, Bruno Watschinger

Abstract

Traditional risk factors do not adequately explain coronary heart disease (CHD) risk after kidney transplantation. We used a large, multicenter database to compare traditional and nontraditional CHD risk factors, and to develop risk-prediction equations for kidney transplant patients in standard clinical practice. We retrospectively assessed risk factors for CHD (acute myocardial infarction, coronary artery revascularization or sudden death) in 23,575 adult kidney transplant patients from 14 transplant centers worldwide. The CHD cumulative incidence was 3.1%, 5.2% and 7.6%, at 1, 3 and 5 years posttransplant, respectively. In separate Cox proportional hazards analyses of CHD in the first posttransplant year (predicted at time of transplant), and predicted within 3 years after a clinic visit occurring in posttransplant years 1-5, important risk factors included pretransplant diabetes, new onset posttransplant diabetes, prior pre- and posttransplant cardiovascular disease events, estimated glomerular filtration rate, delayed graft function, acute rejection, age, sex, race and duration of pretransplant end-stage kidney disease. The risk-prediction equations performed well, with the time-dependent c-statistic greater than 0.75. Traditional risk factors (e.g. hypertension, dyslipidemia and cigarette smoking) added little additional predictive value. Thus, transplant-related risk factors, particularly those linked to graft function, explain much of the variation in CHD after kidney transplantation.

Source: PubMed

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