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Albuminuria in Rheumatoid Arthritis: Associations With Rheumatoid Arthritis Characteristics and Subclinical Atherosclerosis

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Specialty Rheumatology
Date 2017 Mar 4
PMID 28257609
Citations 3
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Abstract

Objective: Albuminuria is a marker for subclinical cardiovascular disease (CVD) in the general population. It is uncertain whether this association is present in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), a population with increased atherosclerosis and CVD events.

Methods: Urine albumin from a spot morning collection was measured, and the urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio (uACR) was calculated for RA patients and a population-based sample of demographically matched non-RA controls. Associations of elevated uACR (≥25 mg/gm for women and ≥17 mg/gm for men) with CVD risk factors and measures of atherosclerosis (coronary artery calcification, ultrasound-determined maximal intima-media thickness of the common carotid artery and internal carotid artery [ICA], and the presence of focal plaque in the ICA) were compared cross-sectionally according to RA status.

Results: We compared 196 RA patients with 271 non-RA controls. Elevated uACR was found in 18% of the RA patients compared with 17% of the controls (P = 0.89). After adjustment, RA was associated with 57% lower odds of elevated uACR (P = 0.016). Higher serum creatinine levels and hypertension were both strongly and significantly associated with elevated uACR in the control group but not in the RA group (both P for interaction < 0.05). Among RA characteristics, the adjusted prevalence of elevated uACR among those treated with tumor necrosis factor inhibitors was less than half that among those not so treated (9% versus 20%, respectively; P = 0.047).

Conclusion: There was no association in the RA group of elevated uACR with measures of atherosclerosis or with several key cardiometabolic risk factors, which suggests a lower usefulness of elevated uACR as an indicator of subclinical CVD in RA.

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Urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio for predicting risk of all-cause mortality and specific-cause mortality in patients with rheumatoid arthritis: evidence from NHANES 1999-2018.

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Association of urinary albumin excretion with all-cause and cardiovascular mortality among patients with rheumatoid arthritis: a national prospective study.

Bin Z, Shen R, Wu R, Fan Y, Zhang X, Gao C Front Immunol. 2024; 15:1412636.

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Longitudinal albuminuria patterns predict coronary artery calcification progression: Findings from the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults study.

Zhang J, Zhong Q, Lin Y, Zhang Y, Teng Y, Chen J Atherosclerosis. 2024; 395:117574.

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