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Chronic Kidney Disease as an Important Co-morbid Condition in Coronary Heart Disease Patients
(2019)
In patients with coronary heart disease (CHD) the control of the modifiable “traditional” cardiovascular risk factors such as hypertension, dyslipidemia, diabetes, achieving/maintaining normal body weight and smoking cessation is of major importance to improve prognosis. Guideline recommendations for secondary CHD prevention include specific treatment targets for blood pressure, lipid levels, and markers of glucose metabolism for both younger and older patients. Chronic kidney disease (CKD) has been identified as a “non-traditional” risk factor for worse outcome in CHD patients, as it is associated with a markedly increased risk for subsequent CV events and mortality.
The specific objectives of the current thesis-project are to investigate (a) the quality of care in a recent sample of German CHD patients and to investigate variation of risk factor control between younger and elder patients (≤70 versus >70 years), (b) to analyze the prevalence of CKD across Europe in stable CHD patients in the outpatient setting and during a hospital stay for CHD, (c) to investigate the level of awareness of CKD in German CHD patients and their treating physicians.
Data from the European-wide EUROASPIRE IV study were used that include data on 7998 CHD patients in the ambulatory setting (study visit) and during a hospital stay for CHD (index). The German EUROASPIRE IV study center in Würzburg recruited 536 patients in 2012-2013. Risk factor control was compared against the current recommendations of the European Society of Cardiology. CKD was described by stages of glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) and albuminuria. German patients were asked in an additional kidney specific module whether they have ever been told by a physician about renal impairment. The fact that CKD or acute kidney injury (AKI) was mentioned in prominent parts of the hospital discharge letter as well as correct ICD-coding of CKD or AKI served as a proxy for physician’s awareness of CKD.
The majority of German CHD patients was treated with the recommended drug therapies including e.g. β-blockers, anti-platelets and statins. However, treatment targets for blood pressure and LDL-cholesterol levels were not achieved in many patients (45% and 53%, respectively) and glycemic control in diabetic CHD patients with HbA1-levels <7% was insufficient (61%). A minority of patients reported on current smoking (10%), but unhealthy life-styles e.g. overweight/obesity (85%/37%) were frequent. Patterns of care differed between younger and older CHD patients while older patients were less likely to receive the recommended medical CHD-therapy, were more likely to have uncontrolled blood pressure and also to be diabetic. However, a greater proportion of diabetic patients >70 years was achieving the HbA1c target, and less elder patients were current smokers or were obese. About 17% of patients on average had CKD (eGFR< 60 ml/min/1.73m²) in the entire European sample at the study visit, and an additional 10% had albuminuria despite preserved eGFR, with considerable variation among countries. Impaired kidney function was observed in every fifth patient admitted for CHD in the entire European dataset of the EUROASPIRE IV study. Of the German CHD patients with CKD at the study visit, only a third were aware of their renal impairment. A minority of these patients was being seen by nephrologists, however, with a higher likelihood of CKD awareness and specialist care in more advanced stages of CKD. About a third of patients admitted for CHD showed either CKD or AKI during the hospital stay, but the discharge letter mentioned chronic or acute kidney disease only in every fifth of these patients. In contrast, correct ICD coding of CKD or AKI was more complete, but still suboptimal.
In summary, quality of secondary prevention in German CHD patients indicates considerably room for improvement, with life-style modifications may become an even greater factor in prevention campaigns than medical treatment into certain target ranges. Preventive therapies should also consider different needs in older individuals acknowledging physical and mental potential, other comorbidities and drug-interactions with co-medication. CKD is common in CHD patients, not only in the elderly. Since CHD and CKD affect each other and impact on worse prognosis of each other, raising the awareness of CKD among patients and physicians and considering CKD in medical therapy may improve prognosis and slow disease progression of CHD as well as CKD.
Chronische Nierenerkrankungen gehen mit einer erhöhten kardiovaskulären Morbidität und Mortalität einher. Charakteristisch für chronische Nierenerkrankungen, insbesondere im Stadium der Dialysepflichtigkeit, ist eine ausgeprägte Voralterung der Gefäße. Die Vorgänge, die den beschleunigten vaskulären Alterungsprozessen zugrunde liegen, umfassen ein Zusammenspiel aus einem gestörten Mineralstoffwechsel, der Akkumulation urämischer Toxine und chronischer Inflammation. Das Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosteron-System (RAAS) nimmt dabei eine zentrale Rolle ein. Eine gesteigerte Aktivität des RAAS ist ein Merkmal von kardiorenalen Syndromen und moduliert jenseits seiner Effekte auf den Blutdruck vaskuläre Entzündungs- und Remodelingprozesse. Durch das vaskuläre Altern kommt es zur Abnahme arterieller Compliance und zur Erhöhung der Pulswellengeschwindigkeit (PWV). Dadurch erhöht sich das Risiko für Endorganschäden. Die arterielle Gefäßsteifigkeit ist ein unabhängiger Prädiktor für Mortalität bei chronisch-dialysepflichtiger Niereninsuffizienz und eine Reduktion arterieller Rigidität geht mit einem verbesserten Überleben einher. Randomisierte Studien bei Dialysepatienten konnten bislang keinen eindeutigen Nutzen etablierter pharmakologischer Interventionen zur Reduktion des kardiovaskulären Risikos und vaskulärer «Stiffeningprozesse» feststellen. Als ein potentiell wirksamer Therapieansatz werden Mineralokortikoidrezeptorantagonisten (MRA) angesehen. Die vorliegende Arbeit evaluierte im Rahmen der Placebo-kontrollierten, randomisierten «Mineralocorticoid-Receptor Antagonists in End-Stage Renal Disease» (MiREnDa) Studie, ob die tägliche Einnahme von 50 mg Spironolacton über neun Monate einen Effekt auf die vaskuläre Funktion bei Patienten mit dialysepflichtiger chronischer Nierenerkrankung hat. Neben aortaler PWV, Augmentationsindex, zentralem Puls- und Blutdruck wurden zur Evaluation der vaskulären Funktion die Compliance der thorakalen Aorta und der A. carotis communis sowie die Distensibilität der A. carotis communis und die fluss-vermittelte Dilatation der A. brachialis vor Studienbeginn als sekundäre Endpunkte festgelegt. Ein weiterer Aspekt, der evaluiert wurde, war die Frage nach Korrelationen zwischen PWV und Augmentationsindex einerseits und weiteren Parametern vaskulärer Funktion, klinischen Merkmalen und Biomarkern andererseits. Die vorliegende Arbeit versuchte darüber hinaus, klinische Merkmale (Komorbiditäten, Inflammation), die ein Therapieansprechen von MRA potentiell modulieren, zu identifizieren. Das zentrale Ergebnis der Arbeit war, dass eine MRA-Therapie mit 50 mg Spironolacton täglich über neun Monate im untersuchten Kollektiv keinen Effekt auf die vaskuläre Funktion zeigte.