Sickle Cell Disease Glomerulopathy In Five Subsaharian African Countries: Results Of The Cadre Study

BLOOD(2013)

引用 2|浏览9
暂无评分
摘要
Introduction Sickle cell disease (SCD) is not only responsible for acute vaso-occlusive events but also for chronic vasculopathy that affects many organs including kidneys. Animal studies have suggested that SCD vasculopathy mainly results from chronic hemolysis. However hemolysis markers have not been consistently associated with clinical vascular complications. Moreover, SCD vasculopathy events have been almost exclusively studied in the USA or in Europe, although more than 80% of SCD patients are born and living in sub-Saharan Africa, a very different environment. We have settled the first multinational African SCD cohort to measure the incidence of SCD vascular complications and looked for their predictive factors in sub-Saharan Africa. We present here our first results, focusing on SCD nephropathy with glomerular involvement and urinary loss of albumin. Methods CADRE is an ongoing cohort of SCD patients in five African countries: Cameroon, Gabon, Ivory Coast, Mali, and Senegal. Included subjects are enrolled at steady state and undergo clinical exam, blood sampling for hemoglobin electrophoresis, blood count, creatinine, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and bilirubin levels, and urine sample for albumin and creatinine levels, as well as echocardiography. Main outcome for the present study was micro or macroalbuminuria defined as urine albumin/creatinine ratio >30 mg/g, that has been shown to be predictive of chronic renal insufficiency in SCD. We differentiated two main SCD groups: 1) SS and Sβ0 and 2) SC and Sβ+. Frequency of albuminuria at inclusion was calculated in both groups, with further stratification according to age. We looked for clinical and biological correlates to albuminuria in both groups using multivariate logistic regression. Results In June 2013, 3850 SCD patients have been recruited, among them 3032 (2290 SS, 445 SC, 202 Sβ+, 95 Sβ0) had available complete inclusion data. Median age was 15 and 20 years in SS/Sβ0 and SC/Sβ+ group, respectively, with similar female/male ratio of 1.2. Frequency of albuminuria was 36.9% [34.4-38.7] in SS/Sβ0 and 16.1% [13.2-19.9] in SC/Sβ+ patients, and increased significantly with age in SS/Sβ0 patients (Fig 1). Albuminuria remained significantly higher in SS/Sβ0 group than in SC/Sβ+ group, after adjustment for age, sex, country, blood pressure and hemoglobin level (p
更多
查看译文
关键词
subsaharian african countries,disease
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要