{"title":"Differential long-term impact of primary glomerular diseases on major outcomes: All are not equal!","authors":"Austin G. Stack","doi":"10.1111/joim.20057","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>The landscape of nephrology, particularly that of glomerular diseases, is an evolving dynamic that has witnessed incredible advancements in diagnostic and therapeutic interventions to improve kidney and patient survival [<span>1-3</span>]. These achievements have been further bolstered by emerging clinical prediction models to enable better and faster clinical decision-making in order to maximize clinical benefit and minimize harm [<span>4-6</span>]. The more precise we are at defining the primary cause of disease and its epidemiological profile, including clinical course, trajectory pattern and downstream long-term outcomes, the more likely we will improve universal efforts that target its prevention. Greater precision in the classification of disease, its clinical phenotype, targeted therapeutic interventions and outcome measurement is the hallmark of precision medicine [<span>7</span>]. Glomerular diseases of the kidney are key exemplars where major advances have occurred in elucidating pathogenesis, molecular signatures, diagnostic techniques and novel treatment strategies, all of which have contributed to greater characterization of unique disease phenotypes and clinical outcomes [<span>1-7</span>]. However, despite these efforts, the scientific community has fallen short in mapping the long-term outcomes of common primary glomerular diseases [<span>8, 9</span>]. Published comparisons to date have suffered from relatively small samples and short follow-up periods. Many have considered glomerular diseases at the aggregate level rather than at the individual level [<span>1-10</span>].</p><p>In this issue of the <i>Journal of Internal Medicine</i>, Faucon et al. provide new data describing the long-term outcomes of four common primary glomerular diseases from analysis of the Swedish Renal Registry [<span>10</span>]. In this nationally representative observational study, they profile the trajectory patterns of IgA nephropathy (IgA), focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS), minimal change disease (MCD) and membranous nephropathy (MN). They reveal significant variation in major long-term outcomes across disease groups and demonstrate that the risks of hospitalization, death and kidney replacement therapy (KRT) for these primary glomerular diseases differ substantially from those of a control CKD population that included patients with diabetes (23.7%), hypertension (39.5%), tubulointerstitial nephritis (3.4%), medication-induced kidney disease (3.0%) and other/unknown causes (30.5%).</p><p>Their observations highlight strikingly different patterns of risk for estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) decline, risk of cardiovascular events and mortality associated with each primary glomerular disease. They reveal that the cumulative mortality was highest for patients diagnosed with FSGS and MN and lowest for those with MCD. Similarly, patients with FSGS had cardiovascular event rates that were similar to patients in the control CKD population but significantly higher than those with MCD. Their observations were further corroborated in time-to-event analyses where adjusted mortality risks were significantly lower for each primary glomerular disease compared to the patients in the control CKD group. The pattern of risk for major adverse cardiovascular events followed a similar trend. These observations would suggest that primary glomerular diseases generate unique eGFR trajectories that can be tracked over time within a defined population. Moreover, their presence confers measurable impact on major outcomes that differ quite substantially depending on the underlying cause. Although it is possible that the differential risks presented here might be influenced by baseline health status at cohort inception, such as demographic factors, cumulative comorbidity burden or prescribed medications, the comprehensive adjustment for a wide range of confounding factors in multivariable models suggests the presence of a true measurable effect.</p><p>The differential impact of each primary glomerular disease on the risk of progression to kidney failure was noteworthy. Patients with underlying IgA disease or FSGS experienced the greatest risk of progression to kidney failure, whereas those with MN or MCD had the lowest risks of progression compared to the control CKD population. These observations were further supported by analysis of eGFR trajectories, whereupon patients with IgA disease and FSGS experienced the steepest declines in annual GFR slopes compared to the control CKD population, whereas patients with MCD experienced the least or no decline. Both FSGS and IgA were characterized by rapid progression trajectories with the highest risks of progression to kidney failure. The analysis also emphasizes a further observation that while all four primary glomerular diseases incurred mortality risks lower than the average CKD cohort, patients with specific primary glomerular diseases, namely, IgA and FSGS, experienced significantly higher risks of progression to KRT.</p><p>One might speculate that the current study does not adequately capture the true magnitude of the differences between individual glomerular diseases and individuals in the control CKD population [<span>10</span>]. Differences in baseline characteristics, including demographic profiles, comorbid burden and severity, standard kidney protective medications and specific immunosuppressive therapies, may have led to imprecision in risk estimation. Patient age is a major risk factor for GFR progression and mortality, and in the present study, the mean age difference between IgA and control CKD patients was a notable 21 years. There were also other marked differences in the distribution of clinical variables across groups, which may have influenced the magnitude of effect on each of the assessed outcomes. Furthermore, given that this is a real-world study, it is possible that treatment changes during the study period may have further influenced patterns of disease progression and longer term outcomes. Despite these challenges, the authors provide evidence of a robust analysis that took into consideration the challenges of the observational design, the differential distribution of baseline characteristics among groups and key confounding variables. Moreover, the study also benefited from very high rates of precision in the diagnosis of primary glomerular disease, with 97% of cases confirmed with a kidney biopsy, robust data linkage with national registries that tracked major outcomes, and minimal loss to follow-up.</p><p>Although other investigators have compared the outcomes of primary glomerular disease to that of the general population [<span>11</span>], the present study relied on controls derived from routine clinical nephrology practice with CKD attributed to common non-glomerular causes. This choice of control population is useful as it provides a contextual framework upon which to base comparisons with other uniquely classified CKD cohorts. It may be argued that the control population was itself quite heterogeneous as it included a wide range of different kidney disorders and may not represent a ‘immunophenotypically distinct disease’ with a unique disease trajectory and clinical outcome. Restricting to a single specific disease would have provided a more precise landmark on which to conduct comparisons. In sensitivity analysis, the authors found that the direction and magnitude of effects on long-term outcomes using more restricted definitions for the control population were broadly similar to those of the original study.</p><p>Glomerular diseases are a heterogeneous group of diseases with significant biological variability [<span>1-3</span>]. It is, therefore, likely that their clinical courses and outcomes will also vary substantially. The current study confirms this heterogeneity of effect on long-term outcomes of kidney failure, hospitalization and death. Moreover, the study underscores the importance of registry-based platforms to examine and characterize the longer term outcomes of primary glomerular diseases and their treatments in real-world settings [<span>8-11</span>]. The establishment of comprehensive disease registries with rigorous attention to disease diagnosis, immunophenotyping, disease trajectories and medication utilization serves to fill an important knowledge gap in our understanding of glomerular disease. These registry-based studies facilitate prognostic studies, development and validation of glomerular-specific risk prediction models and permit comparative effectiveness research on therapeutic interventions. Although clinical trials remain the gold standard for assessment of treatment effect, they have generally been small in size, with short follow-up periods and lack generalizability. In contrast, the registry-based approach fills several important gaps by facilitating larger-scale studies, broadening generalizability and characterizing long-term major outcomes that develop over longer time periods, including the visualization of long-term disease trajectories. The adoption of these real-world observatories into contemporary research programmes is a tremendous addition to the evolving landscape of nephrology and the science of precision medicine.</p><p><b>Austin G. Stack</b>: Conceptualization; writing—review and editing; writing—original draft.</p><p>The author declares no conflicts of interest.</p>","PeriodicalId":196,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Internal Medicine","volume":"297 4","pages":"352-354"},"PeriodicalIF":9.0000,"publicationDate":"2025-01-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/joim.20057","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Internal Medicine","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/joim.20057","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The landscape of nephrology, particularly that of glomerular diseases, is an evolving dynamic that has witnessed incredible advancements in diagnostic and therapeutic interventions to improve kidney and patient survival [1-3]. These achievements have been further bolstered by emerging clinical prediction models to enable better and faster clinical decision-making in order to maximize clinical benefit and minimize harm [4-6]. The more precise we are at defining the primary cause of disease and its epidemiological profile, including clinical course, trajectory pattern and downstream long-term outcomes, the more likely we will improve universal efforts that target its prevention. Greater precision in the classification of disease, its clinical phenotype, targeted therapeutic interventions and outcome measurement is the hallmark of precision medicine [7]. Glomerular diseases of the kidney are key exemplars where major advances have occurred in elucidating pathogenesis, molecular signatures, diagnostic techniques and novel treatment strategies, all of which have contributed to greater characterization of unique disease phenotypes and clinical outcomes [1-7]. However, despite these efforts, the scientific community has fallen short in mapping the long-term outcomes of common primary glomerular diseases [8, 9]. Published comparisons to date have suffered from relatively small samples and short follow-up periods. Many have considered glomerular diseases at the aggregate level rather than at the individual level [1-10].
In this issue of the Journal of Internal Medicine, Faucon et al. provide new data describing the long-term outcomes of four common primary glomerular diseases from analysis of the Swedish Renal Registry [10]. In this nationally representative observational study, they profile the trajectory patterns of IgA nephropathy (IgA), focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS), minimal change disease (MCD) and membranous nephropathy (MN). They reveal significant variation in major long-term outcomes across disease groups and demonstrate that the risks of hospitalization, death and kidney replacement therapy (KRT) for these primary glomerular diseases differ substantially from those of a control CKD population that included patients with diabetes (23.7%), hypertension (39.5%), tubulointerstitial nephritis (3.4%), medication-induced kidney disease (3.0%) and other/unknown causes (30.5%).
Their observations highlight strikingly different patterns of risk for estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) decline, risk of cardiovascular events and mortality associated with each primary glomerular disease. They reveal that the cumulative mortality was highest for patients diagnosed with FSGS and MN and lowest for those with MCD. Similarly, patients with FSGS had cardiovascular event rates that were similar to patients in the control CKD population but significantly higher than those with MCD. Their observations were further corroborated in time-to-event analyses where adjusted mortality risks were significantly lower for each primary glomerular disease compared to the patients in the control CKD group. The pattern of risk for major adverse cardiovascular events followed a similar trend. These observations would suggest that primary glomerular diseases generate unique eGFR trajectories that can be tracked over time within a defined population. Moreover, their presence confers measurable impact on major outcomes that differ quite substantially depending on the underlying cause. Although it is possible that the differential risks presented here might be influenced by baseline health status at cohort inception, such as demographic factors, cumulative comorbidity burden or prescribed medications, the comprehensive adjustment for a wide range of confounding factors in multivariable models suggests the presence of a true measurable effect.
The differential impact of each primary glomerular disease on the risk of progression to kidney failure was noteworthy. Patients with underlying IgA disease or FSGS experienced the greatest risk of progression to kidney failure, whereas those with MN or MCD had the lowest risks of progression compared to the control CKD population. These observations were further supported by analysis of eGFR trajectories, whereupon patients with IgA disease and FSGS experienced the steepest declines in annual GFR slopes compared to the control CKD population, whereas patients with MCD experienced the least or no decline. Both FSGS and IgA were characterized by rapid progression trajectories with the highest risks of progression to kidney failure. The analysis also emphasizes a further observation that while all four primary glomerular diseases incurred mortality risks lower than the average CKD cohort, patients with specific primary glomerular diseases, namely, IgA and FSGS, experienced significantly higher risks of progression to KRT.
One might speculate that the current study does not adequately capture the true magnitude of the differences between individual glomerular diseases and individuals in the control CKD population [10]. Differences in baseline characteristics, including demographic profiles, comorbid burden and severity, standard kidney protective medications and specific immunosuppressive therapies, may have led to imprecision in risk estimation. Patient age is a major risk factor for GFR progression and mortality, and in the present study, the mean age difference between IgA and control CKD patients was a notable 21 years. There were also other marked differences in the distribution of clinical variables across groups, which may have influenced the magnitude of effect on each of the assessed outcomes. Furthermore, given that this is a real-world study, it is possible that treatment changes during the study period may have further influenced patterns of disease progression and longer term outcomes. Despite these challenges, the authors provide evidence of a robust analysis that took into consideration the challenges of the observational design, the differential distribution of baseline characteristics among groups and key confounding variables. Moreover, the study also benefited from very high rates of precision in the diagnosis of primary glomerular disease, with 97% of cases confirmed with a kidney biopsy, robust data linkage with national registries that tracked major outcomes, and minimal loss to follow-up.
Although other investigators have compared the outcomes of primary glomerular disease to that of the general population [11], the present study relied on controls derived from routine clinical nephrology practice with CKD attributed to common non-glomerular causes. This choice of control population is useful as it provides a contextual framework upon which to base comparisons with other uniquely classified CKD cohorts. It may be argued that the control population was itself quite heterogeneous as it included a wide range of different kidney disorders and may not represent a ‘immunophenotypically distinct disease’ with a unique disease trajectory and clinical outcome. Restricting to a single specific disease would have provided a more precise landmark on which to conduct comparisons. In sensitivity analysis, the authors found that the direction and magnitude of effects on long-term outcomes using more restricted definitions for the control population were broadly similar to those of the original study.
Glomerular diseases are a heterogeneous group of diseases with significant biological variability [1-3]. It is, therefore, likely that their clinical courses and outcomes will also vary substantially. The current study confirms this heterogeneity of effect on long-term outcomes of kidney failure, hospitalization and death. Moreover, the study underscores the importance of registry-based platforms to examine and characterize the longer term outcomes of primary glomerular diseases and their treatments in real-world settings [8-11]. The establishment of comprehensive disease registries with rigorous attention to disease diagnosis, immunophenotyping, disease trajectories and medication utilization serves to fill an important knowledge gap in our understanding of glomerular disease. These registry-based studies facilitate prognostic studies, development and validation of glomerular-specific risk prediction models and permit comparative effectiveness research on therapeutic interventions. Although clinical trials remain the gold standard for assessment of treatment effect, they have generally been small in size, with short follow-up periods and lack generalizability. In contrast, the registry-based approach fills several important gaps by facilitating larger-scale studies, broadening generalizability and characterizing long-term major outcomes that develop over longer time periods, including the visualization of long-term disease trajectories. The adoption of these real-world observatories into contemporary research programmes is a tremendous addition to the evolving landscape of nephrology and the science of precision medicine.
Austin G. Stack: Conceptualization; writing—review and editing; writing—original draft.
肾脏病学,特别是肾小球疾病,是一个不断发展的动态,在诊断和治疗干预方面取得了令人难以置信的进步,以改善肾脏和患者的生存[1-3]。新兴的临床预测模型进一步支持了这些成果,使临床决策更好、更快,从而实现临床效益最大化、危害最小化[4-6]。我们越准确地确定疾病的主要原因及其流行病学概况,包括临床过程、轨迹模式和下游长期结果,我们就越有可能改善针对其预防的普遍努力。在疾病分类、临床表型、靶向治疗干预和结果测量方面更精确是精准医学[7]的标志。肾小球疾病是在阐明发病机制、分子特征、诊断技术和新治疗策略方面取得重大进展的关键范例,所有这些都有助于更好地表征独特的疾病表型和临床结果[1-7]。然而,尽管做出了这些努力,科学界在绘制常见原发性肾小球疾病的长期结局方面仍存在不足[8,9]。迄今为止发表的比较研究样本相对较少,随访时间较短。许多人认为肾小球疾病是在整体水平而不是个体水平[1-10]。在这一期的《内科学杂志》上,Faucon等人提供了新的数据,描述了四种常见的原发性肾小球疾病的长期预后,这些数据来自瑞典肾脏登记处bbb的分析。在这项具有全国代表性的观察性研究中,他们分析了IgA肾病(IgA)、局灶节段性肾小球硬化(FSGS)、微小改变病(MCD)和膜性肾病(MN)的轨迹模式。他们揭示了不同疾病组主要长期结局的显著差异,并证明这些原发性肾小球疾病的住院、死亡和肾脏替代治疗(KRT)的风险与CKD对照人群有很大差异,后者包括糖尿病(23.7%)、高血压(39.5%)、小管间质性肾炎(3.4%)、药物性肾脏疾病(3.0%)和其他/未知原因(30.5%)。他们的观察结果强调了与每种原发性肾小球疾病相关的肾小球滤过率(eGFR)下降、心血管事件风险和死亡率的显著不同的风险模式。他们发现,FSGS和MN患者的累积死亡率最高,MCD患者的累积死亡率最低。同样,FSGS患者的心血管事件发生率与对照组CKD患者相似,但明显高于MCD患者。他们的观察结果在时间-事件分析中得到进一步证实,与CKD对照组相比,每种原发性肾小球疾病的调整后死亡率风险显着降低。主要不良心血管事件的风险模式也有类似的趋势。这些观察结果表明,原发性肾小球疾病产生独特的eGFR轨迹,可以在特定人群中随时间追踪。此外,它们的存在对主要结果产生了可衡量的影响,这些影响因根本原因而异。虽然这里提出的不同风险可能受到队列开始时的基线健康状况的影响,如人口因素、累积合并症负担或处方药物,但在多变量模型中对大范围混杂因素的综合调整表明存在真正可测量的影响。每种原发性肾小球疾病对进展为肾衰竭风险的不同影响值得注意。与对照CKD人群相比,IgA疾病或FSGS患者进展为肾衰竭的风险最大,而MN或MCD患者进展为肾衰竭的风险最低。这些观察结果进一步得到eGFR轨迹分析的支持,因此与对照CKD人群相比,IgA疾病和FSGS患者的年度GFR斜率下降幅度最大,而MCD患者的下降幅度最小或没有下降。FSGS和IgA的特点是进展迅速,进展为肾衰竭的风险最高。该分析还强调了一个进一步的观察结果,即尽管所有四种原发性肾小球疾病的死亡率风险都低于平均CKD队列,但患有特定原发性肾小球疾病(即IgA和FSGS)的患者进展为KRT的风险明显更高。 有人可能会推测,目前的研究并没有充分捕捉到个体肾小球疾病与对照CKD人群之间差异的真实程度。基线特征的差异,包括人口统计资料、合并症负担和严重程度、标准肾脏保护药物和特异性免疫抑制治疗,可能导致风险估计不准确。患者年龄是GFR进展和死亡率的主要危险因素,在本研究中,IgA和对照CKD患者的平均年龄相差21岁。临床变量在各组间的分布也存在其他显著差异,这可能影响了对每个评估结果的影响程度。此外,鉴于这是一项真实世界的研究,研究期间治疗方法的改变可能会进一步影响疾病进展模式和长期结果。尽管存在这些挑战,但作者提供了一个强有力的分析证据,该分析考虑了观察设计的挑战、组间基线特征的差异分布和关键混杂变量。此外,该研究还受益于原发性肾小球疾病诊断的非常高的准确率,97%的病例通过肾活检确诊,与跟踪主要结果的国家登记处的强大数据联系,以及最小的随访损失。尽管其他研究者已经将原发性肾小球疾病的结果与普通人群的结果进行了比较,但本研究依赖于来自常规临床肾脏病实践的非肾小球原因CKD的对照。这种对照人群的选择是有用的,因为它提供了一个背景框架,在此基础上与其他独特分类的CKD队列进行比较。可能有人认为,对照人群本身是相当异质性的,因为它包括各种不同的肾脏疾病,可能不代表具有独特疾病轨迹和临床结果的“免疫表型独特疾病”。限制在一种特定疾病上,将提供一个更精确的里程碑,以便进行比较。在敏感性分析中,作者发现,对控制人群使用更严格的定义对长期结果的影响方向和程度与原始研究大致相似。肾小球疾病是一类异质性疾病,具有显著的生物学变异性[1-3]。因此,他们的临床过程和结果可能也会有很大的不同。目前的研究证实了这种对肾衰竭、住院和死亡的长期结果影响的异质性。此外,该研究强调了基于注册的平台在现实环境中检查和描述原发性肾小球疾病及其治疗的长期结果的重要性[8-11]。建立全面的疾病登记处,严格关注疾病诊断、免疫表型、疾病轨迹和药物利用,有助于填补我们对肾小球疾病理解的重要知识空白。这些基于登记的研究促进了预后研究、肾小球特异性风险预测模型的开发和验证,并允许对治疗干预措施进行比较有效性研究。虽然临床试验仍然是评估治疗效果的金标准,但它们通常规模较小,随访时间短,缺乏普遍性。相比之下,基于登记的方法填补了几个重要的空白,促进了大规模的研究,扩大了普遍性,并描述了在较长时间内发展的长期主要结果,包括长期疾病轨迹的可视化。将这些真实世界的观测站纳入当代研究项目是对肾脏病学和精准医学科学不断发展的巨大补充。Austin G. Stack:概念化;写作——审阅和编辑;原创作品。作者声明无利益冲突。
期刊介绍:
JIM – The Journal of Internal Medicine, in continuous publication since 1863, is an international, peer-reviewed scientific journal. It publishes original work in clinical science, spanning from bench to bedside, encompassing a wide range of internal medicine and its subspecialties. JIM showcases original articles, reviews, brief reports, and research letters in the field of internal medicine.