首页> 外文期刊>American Journal of Kidney Diseases: The official journal of the National Kidney Foundation >Association of income level with kidney disease severity and progression among children and adolescents with CKD: A report from the chronic kidney disease in children (CKiD) study
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Association of income level with kidney disease severity and progression among children and adolescents with CKD: A report from the chronic kidney disease in children (CKiD) study

机译:收入水平与CKD儿童和青少年肾脏疾病严重程度和进展的关系:儿童慢性肾脏病(CKiD)研究的报告

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Background Among adults, lower socioeconomic status (SES) is a risk factor for chronic kidney disease (CKD), progression to end-stage renal disease, and poor health outcomes; but its impact on young people with CKD is not established. Study Design Prospective cohort study. Settings & Participants 572 children and adolescents aged 1-16 years with mild to moderate CKD residing in the United States and Canada who were enrolled in the Chronic Kidney Disease in Children (CKiD) Study. Predictor Self-reported annual household income category as a proxy measure for SES: ≥$75,000 (high income), $30,000 to $75,000 (middle income) and $30,000 (low income). Outcomes & Measurements Clinical characteristics and CKD severity at baseline (glomerular filtration rate [GFR] and comorbid conditions related to disease severity and management) and longitudinally (GFR decline and changes in blood pressure z scores and height z scores per year). Results At baseline, low and middle household incomes, compared to high income, were associated with minority race (39% and 20% vs 7%), lower maternal education (28% and 5% vs 1%), abnormal birth history (34% and 32% vs 21%), and having at least one clinical comorbid condition (66% and 64% vs 55%). Baseline median GFRs were similar across income categories (43-45 mL/min/1.73 m2). After adjusting for baseline differences, average GFR declines per year for the low-, middle-, and high-income categories were -2.3%, -2.7%, and -1.9%, respectively, and were not statistically significantly different among groups. Blood pressure control tended to improve in all groups (z score, -0.10 to -0.04) but higher income was associated with a faster improvement. Each group showed similar deficits in height at baseline. Height deficits diminished over time for participants from high-income families, but not among those from low-income families (z scores for height per year, 0.05 and -0.004, respectively; P = 0.03 for comparison of high and low income). Limitations Income is an imperfect measure for SES; CKiD participants are not representative of children and adolescents with CKD who are uninsured or not receiving care; statistical power to detect associations by income level is limited. Conclusions GFR decline was similar across income groups but better improvement in BP was observed among those with high income. Children and adolescents with CKD from lower income households are at higher risk of impaired growth.
机译:背景技术在成年人中,较低的社会经济地位(SES)是导致慢性肾脏疾病(CKD),发展为终末期肾脏疾病和不良健康结果的危险因素。但它对CKD年轻人的影响尚未确定。研究设计前瞻性队列研究。设置与参与者572名年龄在1-16岁的CKD在美国和加拿大的轻度至中度的儿童和青少年,参加了儿童慢性肾脏病(CKiD)研究。 Predictor自报的家庭年收入类别作为SES的替代指标:≥$ 75,000(高收入),$ 30,000至<$ 75,000(中等收入)和<$ 30,000(低收入)。结果与测量基线(肾小球滤过率[GFR]以及与疾病严重程度和管理相关的合并疾病)和纵向(GFR下降以及每年的血压z得分和身高z得分的变化)的临床特征和CKD严重程度。结果在基线时,中低家庭收入与高收入相比与少数族裔(39%和20%对7%),较低的孕产妇教育(28%和5%对1%),异常的出生史(34)有关%和32%vs 21%),并且患有至少一种临床合并症(66%和64%vs 55%)。不同收入类别之间的基线中值GFR相似(43-45 mL / min / 1.73 m2)。调整基线差异后,低收入,中等收入和高收入类别的平均GFR下降分别为-2.3%,-2.7%和-1.9%,各组之间在统计学上没有显着差异。血压控制在所有组中都有改善的趋势(z评分,-0.10至-0.04),但更高的收入与更快的改善相关。每组在基线时都显示出类似的身高缺陷。高收入家庭参与者的身高赤字随时间减少,但低收入家庭参与者的身高赤字却没有减少(每年的身高z值分别为0.05和-0.004;高收入和低收入者的比较P = 0.03)。限制收入是SES的不完善措施; CKiD参与者不代表没有保险或未得到照护的CKD儿童和青少年;按收入水平检测协会的统计能力有限。结论不同收入人群的GFR下降相似,但高收入人群的BP改善更好。来自低收入家庭的患有CKD的儿童和青少年的成长受损风险更高。

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