Associations Between Change in Kidney Functioning, Age, Race/Ethnicity, and Health Indicators in the Health and Retirement Study.

IF 4.3 2区 医学 Q1 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY
Erfei Zhao, Jennifer Ailshire, Jung Ki Kim, Qiao Wu, Eileen M Crimmins
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Abstract

Background: The aging process is accompanied by decline in kidney functioning. It remains unknown to what extent age-related decline in kidney functioning can be attributed to health indicators, and whether rate of decline differs across sociodemographic groups.

Methods: Using data from the Health and Retirement Study from 2006/2008 through 2014/2016, we estimated kidney functioning trajectories, determined by cystatin C, among adults aged over 51 over 8 years. We evaluated the role of age, health conditions/behaviors, and genetics in the decline and also examined sociodemographic differentials.

Results: Kidney function declined with age and accelerated at older ages, even after adjusting for health conditions/behaviors and genetic differences (eg, 0.019 mg/L annual increase in cystatin C among 70-79 compared to 0.007 mg/L among 52-59 at baseline). Decline occurred faster among those with uncontrolled diabetes (0.008, p = .009), heart conditions (0.007, p < .000), and obesity (0.005, p = .033).Hispanic participants (0.007, p = .039) declined faster than non-Hispanic White persons due to diabetes, heart conditions, and obesity; non-Hispanic Black participants had worse baseline kidney functioning (0.099, p < .000), but only one fourth of this Black-White difference was explained by investigated risk factors. People with higher education experienced slower decline (-0.009, p = .004).

Conclusions: Age was a significant predictor of decline in kidney functioning, and its association was not fully explained by health conditions/behaviors, or genetics. Better management of diabetes, heart conditions, and obesity is effective in slowing this decline. Baseline differences in kidney functioning (eg, between non-Hispanic White and Black persons; those with and without hypertension) suggest disparities occur early in the life course and require early interventions.

健康和退休研究中肾功能变化、年龄、种族/民族和健康指标之间的关系。
背景:衰老过程伴随着肾功能的下降。目前尚不清楚与年龄相关的肾功能下降在多大程度上可归因于健康指标,以及不同社会人口群体的下降率是否不同。方法:使用2006/2008年至2014/2016年健康与退休研究的数据,我们估计了51岁以上8岁以上成年人的肾功能轨迹,该轨迹由胱抑素C确定。我们评估了年龄、健康状况/行为和遗传学在下降中的作用,并研究了社会人口统计学差异。结果:即使在调整了健康状况/行为和遗传差异后,肾功能也会随着年龄的增长而下降,并在老年时加速(例如,70-79岁人群中胱抑素C的年增加0.019 mg/L,而基线时52-59岁人群中的年增加0.007 mg/L)。糖尿病(0.008,p=.009)、心脏病(0.007,p<.000)和肥胖(0.005,p=.033)患者的下降速度更快。由于糖尿病、心脏病和肥胖,西班牙裔参与者(0.007、p=.039)的下降速度快于非西班牙族白人;非西班牙裔黑人参与者的基线肾功能较差(0.099,p<.000),但只有四分之一的黑人-白人差异是由调查的风险因素解释的。受过高等教育的人的肾功能下降速度较慢(-0.009,p=0.004)。结论:年龄是肾功能下降的重要预测因素,健康状况/行为或遗传学并不能完全解释其相关性。更好地管理糖尿病、心脏病和肥胖可以有效地减缓这种下降。肾功能的基线差异(例如,非西班牙裔白人和黑人之间;高血压患者和非高血压患者之间)表明,差异发生在生命早期,需要早期干预。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
10.00
自引率
5.90%
发文量
233
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Publishes articles representing the full range of medical sciences pertaining to aging. Appropriate areas include, but are not limited to, basic medical science, clinical epidemiology, clinical research, and health services research for professions such as medicine, dentistry, allied health sciences, and nursing. It publishes articles on research pertinent to human biology and disease.
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