Prevalence and renal prognosis of left ventricular diastolic dysfunction in non-dialysis chronic kidney disease patients with preserved systolic function
Silvio Borrelli, Luca De Nicola, Carlo Garofalo, Ernesto Paoletti, Sergio Lucà, Paolo Chiodini, Stefano Lucà, Nicola Peruzzu, Antonella Netti, Eugenio Lembo, Giovanna Stanzione, Giuseppe Conte, Roberto Minutolo
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Left ventricular (LV) diastolic dysfunction is common in non-dialysis chronic kidney disease (ND-CKD) patients; however, the prevalence estimated according to the new diagnostic criteria as well as the prognostic role of diastolic dysfunction on CKD progression remain unknown. METHOD: We longitudinally evaluated consecutive ND-CKD patients and preserved systolic function (LV ejection fraction > 50%). According to the recently updated guidelines, LV diastolic dysfunction was assessed by four echocardiographic variables (annular e' velocity, average mitral valve E-wave/e' ratio, left atrial volume index and tricuspid regurgitation). Patients were classified as diastolic dysfunction, indeterminate and normal. Time-dependent estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) change was assessed by mixed-effects regression model. Cumulative incidence of composite renal outcome (eGFR decline > 50% or chronic dialysis) was also estimated. RESULTS: Among 140 patients (age 66.2 ± 14.5 years; 61% males; eGFR 39.8 ± 21.8 ml/min per 1.73m2; 43.6% diabetics), diastolic dysfunction occurred in 22.9%, indeterminate in 45.7% and normal in 31.4%. Prevalence of diastolic dysfunction was much lower than that estimated with older criteria (62.7%). Logistic regression (odds ratio, 95% confidence interval [CI]) showed that diastolic dysfunction was associated with lower eGFR (0.97, 0.94-0.99), older age (1.04, 1.01-1.06) and night-time systolic blood pressure (1.04, 1.00-1.07). Across 1702 eGFR measurements collected during a median follow-up of 4.6 years, eGFR decline (ml/min per 1.73m2; per year) was faster in patients with diastolic dysfunction (-2.12, 95% CI from -2.68 to -1.56) and in the indeterminate (11.2/100 pts per year) as compared to normal (-1.14, 95% CI from -1.64 to -0.63). Incidence of composite renal outcome was significantly higher in diastolic dysfunction (13.8/100 pts/year) than in normal group (3.5/100 pts per year)'. CONCLUSION: In ND-CKD population, LV diastolic dysfunction is less frequent than previously described and acts as independent predictor of CKD progression.