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Association between sclerostin levels and vascular outcomes in kidney transplantation patients

Title
Association between sclerostin levels and vascular outcomes in kidney transplantation patients
Authors
Koh H.B.Ryu J.H.Kim S.-S.Kim M.-G.Park J.B.Kim C.D.Kang K.P.Ro H.Han S.-Y.Huh K.H.Yang J.
Ewha Authors
류정화
SCOPUS Author ID
류정화scopus
Issue Date
2023
Journal Title
Journal of Nephrology
ISSN
1121-8428JCR Link
Citation
Journal of Nephrology vol. 36, no. 7, pp. 2091 - 2109
Keywords
Abdominal aortic calcificationArterial stiffnessKidney transplantationPulse wave velocitySclerostin
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Background: The impact of circulating sclerostin levels on vascular calcification has shown conflicting results depending on the target population and vascular anatomy. This study investigated the associations of sclerostin levels with vascular outcomes in kidney transplant patients. Methods: In a prospective observational study of the Korean Cohort Study for Outcome in Patients with Kidney Transplantation, 591 patients with serum sclerostin level data prior to transplantation were analyzed. The main predictor was the pre-transplant sclerostin level. Vascular outcomes were the abdominal aortic calcification score and brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity measured at pre-transplant screening and three and five years after kidney transplantation. Results: In linear regression analysis, sclerostin level positively correlated with changes in abdominal aortic calcification score between baseline and five years after kidney transplantation (coefficient of 0.73 [95% CI, 0.11–1.35] and 0.74 [95% CI, 0.06–1.42] for second and third tertiles, respectively, vs the first tertile). In a longitudinal analysis over five years, using generalized estimating equations, the coefficient of the interaction (sclerostin × time) was significant with a positive value, indicating that higher sclerostin levels were associated with faster increase in post-transplant abdominal aortic calcification score. Linear regression analysis revealed a positive association between pre-transplant sclerostin levels and changes in brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity (coefficient of 126.7 [95% CI, 35.6–217.8], third vs first tertile). Moreover, a significant interaction was identified between sclerostin levels and brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity at five years. Conclusions: Elevated pre-transplant sclerostin levels are associated with the progression of post-transplant aortic calcifications and arterial stiffness. Graphical abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.] © 2023, The Author(s) under exclusive licence to Italian Society of Nephrology.
DOI
10.1007/s40620-023-01732-7
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의과대학 > 의학과 > Journal papers
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