Long-Term Outcomes in IgA Nephropathy

Author:

Pitcher David12ORCID,Braddon Fiona1ORCID,Hendry Bruce3ORCID,Mercer Alex4ORCID,Osmaston Kate1ORCID,Saleem Moin A.5ORCID,Steenkamp Retha1ORCID,Wong Katie12ORCID,Turner A. Neil6ORCID,Wang Kaijun3,Gale Daniel P.2ORCID,Barratt Jonathan7

Affiliation:

1. UK Renal Registry, The UK Kidney Association, Bristol, United Kingdom

2. Department of Renal Medicine, University College London, London, United Kingdom

3. Travere Therapeutics, Inc., San Diego, California

4. JAMCO Pharma Consulting, Stockholm, Sweden

5. University of Bristol & Bristol Royal Hospital for Children, Bristol, United Kingdom

6. University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

7. University of Leicester & Leicester General Hospital, Leicester, United Kingdom

Abstract

Background IgA nephropathy can progress to kidney failure, and risk assessment soon after diagnosis has advantages both for clinical management and the development of new therapeutics. We present relationships among proteinuria, eGFR slope, and lifetime risks for kidney failure. Methods The IgA nephropathy cohort (2299 adults and 140 children) of the UK National Registry of Rare Kidney Diseases (RaDaR) was analyzed. Patients enrolled had a biopsy-proven diagnosis of IgA nephropathy plus proteinuria >0.5 g/d or eGFR <60 ml/min per 1.73 m2. Incident and prevalent populations and a population representative of a typical phase 3 clinical trial cohort were studied. Analyses of kidney survival were conducted using Kaplan–Meier and Cox regression. eGFR slope was estimated using linear mixed models with random intercept and slope. Results The median (Q1, Q3) follow-up was 5.9 (3.0, 10.5) years; 50% of patients reached kidney failure or died in the study period. The median (95% confidence interval [CI]) kidney survival was 11.4 (10.5 to 12.5) years; the mean age at kidney failure/death was 48 years, and most patients progressed to kidney failure within 10–15 years. On the basis of eGFR and age at diagnosis, almost all patients were at risk of progression to kidney failure within their expected lifetime unless a rate of eGFR loss ≤1 ml/min per 1.73 m2 per year was maintained. Time-averaged proteinuria was significantly associated with worse kidney survival and more rapid eGFR loss in incident, prevalent, and clinical trial populations. Thirty percent of patients with time-averaged proteinuria of 0.44 to <0.88 g/g and approximately 20% of patients with time-averaged proteinuria <0.44 g/g developed kidney failure within 10 years. In the clinical trial population, each 10% decrease in time-averaged proteinuria from baseline was associated with a hazard ratio (95% CI) for kidney failure/death of 0.89 (0.87 to 0.92). Conclusions Outcomes in this large IgA nephropathy cohort are generally poor with few patients expected to avoid kidney failure in their lifetime. Significantly, patients traditionally regarded as being low risk, with proteinuria <0.88 g/g (<100 mg/mmol), had high rates of kidney failure within 10 years.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Transplantation,Nephrology,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine,Epidemiology

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