Urotensin II is an inverse predictor of death and fatal cardiovascular events in chronic kidney disease

P Ravani, G Tripepi, P Pecchini, F Mallamaci, F Malberti, C Zoccali, P Ravani, G Tripepi, P Pecchini, F Mallamaci, F Malberti, C Zoccali

Abstract

Urotensin II (UTN), a cyclic vasoactive peptide expressed in multiple organs, had higher plasma levels that was previously shown to predict longer survival in dialysis patients. We sought to determine if this association exists in earlier stages of chronic kidney disease (CKD) by studying a cohort of 122 incident clinically stable pre-dialysis patients. Linear models were used to determine associations of UTN with baseline characteristics such as renal function and traditional and nontraditional cardiovascular risk factors. We used Cox regression analysis to model time-to-death as a function of UTN and the same variables for adjustment including a time-varying covariate that indicated progression to end-stage renal disease. No correlation was found between baseline glomerular filtration rate and plasma UTN. In adjusted analysis, UTN correlated directly with serum albumin and, inversely, with history of previous coronary events. During a mean follow-up of 41 months, 43 patients died - 29 from cardiovascular events. After adjusting for potential confounding factors, increased UTN predicted lower risk of death from all-cause and cardiovascular causes. In patients with moderate-to-severe CKD, plasma UTN was found to be an inverse predictor of overall and cardiovascular mortality.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00384995.

Source: PubMed

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