The significance of glycated albumin (GA), compared with casual plasma glucose (PG) and glycated hemoglobin (HbA 1c ), was evaluated as an indicator of the glycemic control state in hemodialysis (HD) patients with diabetes. The mean PG, GA, and HbA 1c levels were 164.5 ؎ 55.7 mg/dl, 22.5 ؎ 7.5%, and 5.85 ؎ 1.26%, respectively, in HD patients with diabetes (n ؍ 538), which were increased by 51.5, 31.6, and 17.7%, respectively, compared with HD patients without diabetes (n ؍ 828). HbA 1c levels were significantly lower than simultaneous PG and GA values in those patients in comparison with the relationship among the three parameters in patients who had diabetes without renal dysfunction (n ؍ 365), as reflected by the significantly more shallow slope of regression line between HbA 1c and PG or GA. A significant negative correlation was found between GA and serum albumin (r ؍ ؊0.131, P ؍ 0.002) in HD patients with diabetes, whereas HbA 1c correlated positively and negatively with hemoglobin (r ؍ 0.090, P ؍ 0.036) and weekly dose of erythropoietin injection (r ؍ ؊0.159, P < 0.001), respectively. Although PG and GA did not differ significantly between HD patients with diabetes and with and without erythropoietin injection, HbA 1c levels were significantly higher in patients without erythropoietin. Categorization of glycemic control into arbitrary quartile by HbA 1c level led to better glycemic control in a significantly higher proportions of HD patients with diabetes than those assessed by GA. Multiple regression analysis demonstrated that the weekly dose of erythropoietin, in addition to PG, emerged as an independent factor associated with HbA 1c in HD patients with diabetes, although PG but not albumin was an independent factor associated with GA. In summary, it is suggested that GA provides a significantly better measure to estimate glycemic control in HD patients with diabetes and that the assessment of glycemic control by HbA 1c in these patients might lead to underestimation likely as a result of the increasing proportion of young erythrocyte by the use of erythropoietin.
These results indicate that use of oral alfacalcidol was associated with reduced risk for cardiovascular death in this cohort of ESRD patients. The result of this observational study warrants further randomized controlled trials with 1alpha-hydroxy vitamin D3 to confirm the possibility that such medication improves survival of ESRD patients.
Abstract. Insulin resistance is closely associated with atherosclerosis and cardiovascular mortality in the general population. Patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) are known to have insulin resistance, advanced atherosclerosis, and a high cardiovascular mortality rate. We evaluated whether insulin resistance is a predictor of cardiovascular death in a cohort of ESRD. A prospective observational cohort study was performed in 183 nondiabetic patients with ESRD treated with maintenance hemodialysis. Insulin resistance was evaluated by the homeostasis model assessment method (HOMA-IR) using fasting glucose and insulin levels at baseline, and the cohort was followed for a mean period of 67 mo. Forty-nine deaths were recorded, including 22 cardiovascular deaths. Cumulative incidence of cardiovascular death by Kaplan-Meier estimation was significantly different between subjects in the top tertile of HOMA-IR (1.40 to 4.59) and those in the lower tertiles of HOMA-IR (0.28 to 1.39), and the hazard ratio (HR) was 2.60 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.12 to 6.01; P ϭ 0.026) in the univariate Cox proportional hazards model. In multivariate Cox models, the positive association between HOMA-IR and cardiovascular mortality remained significant (HR, 4.60; 95% CI, 1.83 to 11.55; P ϭ 0.001) and independent of age, C-reactive protein, and presence of preexisting vascular complications. Further analyses showed that the effect of HOMA-IR on cardiovascular mortality was independent of body mass index, hypertension, and dyslipidemia. In contrast, HOMA-IR did not show such a significant association with noncardiovascular mortality. These results indicate that insulin resistance is an independent predictor of cardiovascular mortality in ESRD.
Objective. To determine whether arterial wall thickening is advanced in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients compared with healthy controls by measuring the intima-media thickness (IMT) of the common carotid and femoral arteries, and to evaluate the factors associated with arterial IMT in patients with RA.Methods. We studied 138 RA patients and 94 healthy controls (matched for age, sex, and other major risk factors for atherosclerosis). Conclusion. RA patients exhibited greater thickness of the common carotid and femoral arteries than healthy controls. The duration and severity of RA and decreased activities of daily living, but not corticosteroid treatment, were independently associated with the increased arterial wall thickness.
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