Background/Aims: The aim was to examine the influence of statin therapy on the natural history of atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis (RAS). Methods: Our hospital atherosclerotic renovascular disease (ARVD) database was analysed for patients who underwent repeat renal angiography during clinical follow-up. Patients with ≧1 RAS lesion and ≧4 months between baseline and repeat renal angiography were analysed. 79 patients were included. Baseline renal arterial anatomy was classified as normal, ≤50% RAS, >50% RAS or renal artery occlusion. Results: Mean follow-up time between angiograms was 27.8 ± 22.3 (4.0–101.9) months. Progression of RAS occurred in 28 (23%) vessels, regression in 14 (12%) and no significant change in 79 (65%). Multivariate regression analysis showed that baseline proteinuria >0.6 g/day increased the risk of progressive disease (relative risk, RR, 3.8; 95% confidence interval, CI, 1.2–12.1), treatment with statin reduced the risk of progression (RR 0.28; 95% CI 0.10–0.77). 14 renal arteries from 12 patients showed RAS regression with a greater proportion on statin [statin treatment 10 (83%) versus no statin treatment 2 (17%), p = 0.001]. Change in estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) per year was not different between statin- and no-statin-treated groups. Conclusions: Progression or development of RAS was significantly less likely to occur with statin therapy. ΔeGFR did not correlate with progression of RAS, reflecting the importance of intrarenal injury in the aetiology of renal dysfunction. Our results suggest statin therapy can alter the natural history of ARVD.
A retrospective review of 1550 cases of hyperparathyroidism (HPT) treated surgically over a 30-year period reveals a past history of exposure to neck irradiation in 10 cases (0.7 per cent). The indication for radiotherapy was benign disease in nine and papillary thyroid carcinoma in one case. The mean interval between radiation exposure and the detection of HPT was 32 years (range 3-63 years). Patients treated with radioactive iodine alone developed HPT after a mean of 5 years while the interval for those treated with external beam therapy alone was a mean of 44 years. The parathyroid histology was adenoma in six cases, carcinoma in three cases and nodular hyperplasia in one case. All patients had coincident benign thyroid disease apart from one that had previously had papillary carcinoma and another with follicular carcinoma. Neck irradiation has been shown to confer an increased risk of HPT due to parathyroid adenoma and carcinoma. Radiotherapy for benign disease has generally been abandoned and these cases demonstrate a further contra-indication for the use of neck irradiation.
Our data suggest that, after revascularization, GFR improvement is likely if there is a disproportionately higher baseline PV:SK-GFR in the RAS kidney. Analysing these parameters can potentially identify these 'hibernating' kidneys and aid determination of renal functional outcome in RAS.
Purpose:To examine the positive reporting bias regarding the link with gadolinium (Gd) exposure and nephrogenic systemic fibrosis (NSF) in patients with renal impairment. This link has impacted strongly the international radiology safety guidelines. We believe that positive reporting bias has prevailed in the literature and that very few patients with a glomerular filtration rate (GFR) 15-29 mL/min (stage 4 chronic kidney disease [CKD]) should be regarded as high risk.
Materials and Methods:To examine this, we conducted the following steps: 1. A critical literature search on NSF. 2. An analysis of our centers magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) experience since 1999. 3. A survey of participating centers of the multicenter ASTRAL trial to assess whether any patients screened or enrolled into ASTRAL had developed NSF.
Results:The vast majority (90%) of NSF cases reported in the literature have occurred in patients with endstage renal disease treated with dialysis; very have had stable stage 4 or 5 (nondialysis) CKD. In all, 562 patients were followed up at our center: 30.4% were CKD4, 14.4% CKD5, 5.3% on dialysis, and 0.2% had renal transplants when imaged. No patients developed any symptoms or signs of NSF. In all, 347 patients were enrolled into ASTRAL on the basis of MRA (32% CKD4/5). One patient out of 45 centers (CKD5, received two Gd scans) developed NSF. Approximately 5 times as many patients were screened as were entered into ASTRAL.
Conclusion:No cases of NSF were observed at our center. By extrapolation, 1/1735 patients screened for the AS-TRAL trial developed NSF, giving a crude incidence rate of 0.06%. We would argue that patients with CKD4 can safely undergo Gd-MRA, albeit using a minimal dose of a macrocyclic agent and avoiding repeat doses.
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