Long-term kidney outcomes in children and adolescents with hypertension: a propensity-matched cohort study

IF 15.5 1区 医学 Q1 PEDIATRICS
Junayd Hussain MSc , Kalina Georgieva BHK , Cal H Robinson MD , Nivethika Jeyakumar MSc , Graham Smith PhD , Prof Tammy Brady MD PhD , Allison Dart MD MSc , Janis Dionne MD , Sabine Karam MD , Ashlene M McKay MD , Prof Rulan Parekh MD MSc , Rukshana Shroff MD PhD , Prof Manish D Sinha MBBS PhD , Andrew M South MD MSc , Carol Vincent MD MSc , Prof Manish M Sood MD MSc , Rahul Chanchlani MD MSc
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

Hypertension affects 6% of all children and adolescents, is increasing in prevalence, and is associated with adverse cardiovascular outcomes. In childhood chronic kidney disease, hypertension is associated with progression to kidney failure. However, direct evidence linking childhood hypertension with long-term adverse kidney outcomes is scarce. We aimed to determine the long-term risk of major adverse kidney events (MAKEs) among children and adolescents diagnosed with hypertension.

Methods

In this population-based retrospective cohort study, we assessed data from all children and adolescents (aged 3–18 years) diagnosed with hypertension from April 1, 1996, to March 31, 2023, in Ontario, Canada, using validated case definitions in health administrative databases. Each case was propensity score-matched with up to five controls without hypertension by age, sex, birthweight, maternal gestational hypertension, pre-existing diabetes, previous cardiovascular surgery, obesity, previous acute kidney injury, and a propensity score for hypertension diagnosis. The primary outcome was major adverse kidney events (MAKEs; ie, all-cause mortality, incident chronic kidney disease, or kidney failure defined as start of chronic dialysis or receipt of kidney transplantation), assessed using weighted Cox regression using robust variance estimators to estimate hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% CIs.

Findings

26 324 children and adolescents with hypertension were matched with 126 834 controls without hypertension, who were balanced on baseline covariates by propensity score matching. For children and adolescents with hypertension, median age at entry was 15 years (IQR 12–17), there were 10 868 (41·3%) females and 15 456 (58·7%) males, and previous personal and maternal comorbidities were uncommon (1169 [4·4%] had congenital heart disease, 1787 [6·8%] malignancy, 432 [1·6%] diabetes, 2356 [9·0%] complex chronic conditions, and 379 [3·0%] born to mothers with hypertension). During a median 14·2-year follow-up (IQR 7·4–20·7) in the hypertension cohort and 13·7-year follow-up (7·1–21·2) among controls, MAKE incidence was 5·52 per 1000 person-years (95% CI 5·28–5·76) in children and adolescents with hypertension versus 1·66 per 1000 person-years (1·60–1·72) in matched non-hypertensive controls (7·7% vs 2·4%; HR 3·03 [95% CI 2·86–3·21]).

Interpretation

Children and adolescents diagnosed with hypertension are at greater long-term risk of MAKEs compared with non-hypertensive controls. Improved recognition and control of paediatric hypertension might prevent progressive kidney dysfunction. These findings should be confirmed by large-scale, well-controlled prospective studies.

Funding

Department of Pediatrics at McMaster University.
儿童和青少年高血压患者的长期肾脏预后:一项倾向匹配的队列研究
高血压影响了6%的儿童和青少年,患病率正在上升,并与不良心血管结局相关。在儿童慢性肾脏疾病中,高血压与肾衰竭的进展有关。然而,将儿童高血压与长期不良肾脏结局联系起来的直接证据很少。我们的目的是确定诊断为高血压的儿童和青少年发生主要肾脏不良事件(make)的长期风险。
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来源期刊
Lancet Child & Adolescent Health
Lancet Child & Adolescent Health Psychology-Developmental and Educational Psychology
CiteScore
40.90
自引率
0.80%
发文量
381
期刊介绍: The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health, an independent journal with a global perspective and strong clinical focus, presents influential original research, authoritative reviews, and insightful opinion pieces to promote the health of children from fetal development through young adulthood. This journal invite submissions that will directly impact clinical practice or child health across the disciplines of general paediatrics, adolescent medicine, or child development, and across all paediatric subspecialties including (but not limited to) allergy and immunology, cardiology, critical care, endocrinology, fetal and neonatal medicine, gastroenterology, haematology, hepatology and nutrition, infectious diseases, neurology, oncology, psychiatry, respiratory medicine, and surgery. Content includes articles, reviews, viewpoints, clinical pictures, comments, and correspondence, along with series and commissions aimed at driving positive change in clinical practice and health policy in child and adolescent health.
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