AIM: To compare anemia prevalence between matched chronic kidney disease(CKD) patients with and without diabetes mellitus(DM) and to assess factors associated with anemia development.METHODS: This is a nested case-con...AIM: To compare anemia prevalence between matched chronic kidney disease(CKD) patients with and without diabetes mellitus(DM) and to assess factors associated with anemia development.METHODS: This is a nested case-control study of 184 type-2 diabetic and 184 non-diabetic CKD patients from a prospectively assembled database of a Nephrology outpatient clinic, matched for gender, age and estimated glomerular filtration rate(eG FR). Prevalence of anemia(hemoglobin: Men: < 13 g/dL, women: < 12 g/dL and/or use of recombinant erythropoietin) was examined in comparison, in the total population and by CKD Stage. Univariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses were conducted to identify factors associated with anemia.RESULTS: The total prevalence of anemia was higher in diabetics(47.8% vs 33.2%, P = 0.004). Accordingly, prevalence was higher in diabetics in CKD Stage 3(53.5% vs 33.1%, P < 0.001) and particularly in Stage 3a(60.4% vs 26.4%, P < 0.001), whereas it was nonsignificantly higher in Stage 4(61.3% vs 48.4%; P = 0.307). Serum ferritin was higher in diabetics in total and in CKD stages, while serum iron was similar between groups. In multivariate analyses, DM(OR = 2.206, 95%CI: 1.196-4.069), CKD Stages 3a, 3b, 4(Stage 4: OR = 12.169, 95%CI: 3.783-39.147) and serum iron(OR = 0.976, 95%CI: 0.968-0.985 per mg/d L increase) were independently associated with anemia.CONCLUSION: Prevalence of anemia progressively increases with advancing stages of CKD and is higher in diabetic than matched non-diabetic CKD patients and diabetes is independently associated with anemia occurrence. Detection and treatment of anemia in diabetic CKD patients should be performed earlier than non-diabetic counterparts.展开更多
文摘AIM: To compare anemia prevalence between matched chronic kidney disease(CKD) patients with and without diabetes mellitus(DM) and to assess factors associated with anemia development.METHODS: This is a nested case-control study of 184 type-2 diabetic and 184 non-diabetic CKD patients from a prospectively assembled database of a Nephrology outpatient clinic, matched for gender, age and estimated glomerular filtration rate(eG FR). Prevalence of anemia(hemoglobin: Men: < 13 g/dL, women: < 12 g/dL and/or use of recombinant erythropoietin) was examined in comparison, in the total population and by CKD Stage. Univariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses were conducted to identify factors associated with anemia.RESULTS: The total prevalence of anemia was higher in diabetics(47.8% vs 33.2%, P = 0.004). Accordingly, prevalence was higher in diabetics in CKD Stage 3(53.5% vs 33.1%, P < 0.001) and particularly in Stage 3a(60.4% vs 26.4%, P < 0.001), whereas it was nonsignificantly higher in Stage 4(61.3% vs 48.4%; P = 0.307). Serum ferritin was higher in diabetics in total and in CKD stages, while serum iron was similar between groups. In multivariate analyses, DM(OR = 2.206, 95%CI: 1.196-4.069), CKD Stages 3a, 3b, 4(Stage 4: OR = 12.169, 95%CI: 3.783-39.147) and serum iron(OR = 0.976, 95%CI: 0.968-0.985 per mg/d L increase) were independently associated with anemia.CONCLUSION: Prevalence of anemia progressively increases with advancing stages of CKD and is higher in diabetic than matched non-diabetic CKD patients and diabetes is independently associated with anemia occurrence. Detection and treatment of anemia in diabetic CKD patients should be performed earlier than non-diabetic counterparts.