HIV-positive individuals are at increased risk for kidney disease, including HIV-associated nephropathy, noncollapsing focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, immune-complex kidney disease, and comorbid kidney disease, as well as kidney injury resulting from prolonged exposure to antiretroviral therapy or from opportunistic infections. Clinical guidelines for kidney disease prevention and treatment in HIV-positive individuals are largely extrapolated from studies in the general population, and do not fully incorporate existing knowledge of the unique HIV-related pathways and genetic factors that contribute to the risk of kidney disease in this population. We convened an international panel of experts in nephrology, renal pathology, and infectious diseases to define the pathology of kidney disease in the setting of HIV infection; describe the role of genetics in the natural history, diagnosis, and treatment of kidney disease in HIV-positive individuals; characterize the renal risk-benefit of antiretroviral therapy for HIV treatment and prevention; and define best practices for the prevention and management of kidney disease in HIV-positive individuals.
A wide clinical spectrum of renal diseases affects individuals with HIV. These conditions include acute kidney injury, electrolyte and acid-base disturbances, HIV-associated glomerular disease, acute-on-chronic renal disease and adverse side effects related to treatment of HIV. Studies employing varying criteria for diagnosis of kidney disease have reported a variable prevalence of these diseases in patients with HIV in sub-Saharan Africa: 6% in South Africa, 38% in Nigeria, 26% in Côte d'Ivoire, 28% in Tanzania, 25% in Kenya, 20-48.5% in Uganda and 33.5% in Zambia. Results from these studies also suggest that a broader spectrum of histopathological lesions in HIV-associated kidney disease exists in African populations than previously thought. Strategies to prevent or retard progression to end-stage renal disease of HIV-associated kidney conditions should include urinalysis and measurement of kidney function of all people with HIV at presentation. Renal replacement in the form of dialysis and transplantation should be implemented as appropriate. This Review focuses on the available evidence of renal diseases in patients with HIV infection in sub-Saharan Africa and offers practical guidelines to treat these conditions that also take into consideration challenges and obstacles that are specific to sub-Saharan Africa.
Background Rapid epidemiological health transitions occurring in vulnerable populations in Africa that have an existing burden of infectious and non-communicable diseases predict an increased risk and consequent prevalence of kidney disease. However, few studies have characterised the true burden of kidney damage and associated risk factors in Africans. We investigated the prevalence of markers for kidney damage and known risk factors in rural and urban settings in sub-Saharan Africa. Methods In this cross-sectional population study (Africa Wits-International Network for the Demographic Evaluation of Populations and their Health Partnership for Genomic Studies [AWI-Gen]), we recruited unrelated adult participants aged 40-60 years from four rural community research sites (Nanoro, Burkina Faso; Navrongo, Ghana; Agincourt and Dikgale, South Africa), and two urban community research sites (Nairobi, Kenya; and Soweto, South Africa). Participants were identified and selected using random sampling frames already in use at each site. Participants completed a lifestyle and medical history questionnaire, had anthropometric and blood pressure measurements taken, and blood and urine samples were collected. Markers of kidney damage were defined as low estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR; <60 mL/min per 1·73 m²), presence of albuminuria (urine albumin creatinine ratio >3 mg/mmol); or chronic kidney disease (low eGFR or albuminuria, or both). We calculated ageadjusted prevalence of chronic kidney disease, low eGFR, and albuminuria by site and sex and used logistic regression models to assess risk factors of kidney damage.Findings Between August, 2013, and August, 2016, we recruited 10 702 participants, of whom 8110 were analysable. 4120 (50·8%) of analysable participants were male, with a mean age of 49·9 years (SD 5·8). Age-standardised population prevalence was 2·4% (95% CI 2·1-2·8) for low eGFR, 9·2% (8·4-10·0) for albuminuria, and 10·7% (9·9-11·7) for chronic kidney disease, with higher prevalences in South African sites than in west African sites (14·0% [11·9-16·4] in Agincourt vs 6·6% [5·5-7·9] in Nanoro). Women had a higher prevalence of chronic kidney disease (12·0% [10·8-13·2] vs 9·5% [8·3-10·8]) and low eGFR (3·0% [2·6-3·6] vs 1·7% [1·3-2·3]) than did men, with no sex-specific differences for albuminuria (9·9% [8·8-11·0] vs 8·4% [7·3-9·7]). Risk factors for kidney damage were older age (relative risk 1·04, 95% CI 1·03-1·05; p<0·0001), hypertension (1·97, 1·68-2·30; p<0·0001), diabetes (2·22, 1·76-2·78; p<0·0001), and HIV (1·65, 1·36-1·99; p<0·0001); whereas male sex was protective (0·85, 0·73-0·98; p=0·02).Interpretation Regional differences in prevalence and risks of chronic kidney disease in sub-Saharan Africa relate in part to varying stages of sociodemographic and epidemiological health transitions across the area. Public health policy should focus on integrated strategies for screening, prevention, and risk factor management in the broader non-communicable disease and infectious diseases framework.
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