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      Abdominal aortic calcification in dialysis patients: results of the CORD study

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          Abstract

          Background. Patients with chronic kidney disease stage 5 have a high prevalence of vascular calcification, but the specific anatomical distribution and severity of abdominal aortic calcification (AAC), in contrast to coronary calcification, is less well documented. AAC may be recorded using plain radiographs. The present report is an analysis of baseline data on AAC in patients enrolled in the CORD (Calcification Outcome in Renal Disease) study.

          Methods. A total of 47 centres in six European countries participated in this cross-sectional study. Inclusion criteria were age ≥18 years and duration of dialysis ≥3 months. Lateral lumbar radiography of the abdominal aorta was used to determine the overall AAC score, which is related to the severity of calcific deposits at lumbar vertebral segments L1–L4. The reliability of the method was tested by double reading of 64 radiographs (coefficient of correlation 0.9).

          Results. A lateral lumbar radiograph was obtained in 933 patients. Calcification (AAC score ≥ 1) was present in 81% of the patients; its severity increased significantly from L1 to L4 ( P < 0.0001) and affected all of these segments in 51% of patients. Independent predictors for the presence and severity of calcification were age (odds ratio [OR] 1.103/year; P < 0.0001), duration of dialysis (OR 1.110/year; P = 0.002) and history of cardiovascular disease (OR 3.247; P < 0.0001).

          Conclusions. AAC detected by lateral lumbar radiograph is associated with several risk factors of uraemic calcification. This semi-quantitative method is more widely available and less expensive than the current procedures for studying calcification and could form part of a pre-transplant workup and cardiovascular risk stratification.

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          Most cited references22

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          Clinical epidemiology of cardiovascular disease in chronic renal disease.

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            New indices to classify location, severity and progression of calcific lesions in the abdominal aorta: a 25-year follow-up study.

            L Kauppila (1997)
            The purpose of the present study was to assess the location, severity and progression of radiopaque lumbar aortic calcifications and to evaluate the utility of summary scores of lumbar calcification in a population-based cohort. Lateral lumbar films, obtained in 617 Framingham heart study participants, were analysed for the presence of abdominal aortic wall calcification in the region corresponding to the first through fourth lumbar vertebrae. The severity of the anterior and posterior aortic calcification were graded individually on a 0-3 scale for each lumbar segment and the results were summarized to develop four different composite scores: (1) affected segments score (range 0-4); (2) anterior and posterior affected score (range 0-8); and (3) antero-posterior severity score (range 0-24). The prevalence of aortic calcification was 37% in men and 27% in women at baseline and 86% in both genders at the follow-up exam 25 years later. During the follow-up interval, the mean of the affected segments score increased from 0.7 in men (0.5 in women) to 2.7 (2.8 in women), the mean of the anterior and posterior affected score from 1.2 (0.8 in women) (P = 0.012 for difference between genders) and the mean of the antero-posterior severity score increased from 1.5 (1.3 in women) to 9.3 (10.3 in women). The antero-posterior severity score offered a slight advantage over other composite scores and had the highest inter-rater intra-class correlations. In summary, lumbar aortic calcification can be graded and composite summary scores are reproducible. This technique appears to provide a simple, low cost assessment of subclinical vascular disease.
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              Abdominal aortic calcific deposits are an important predictor of vascular morbidity and mortality.

              The impact of abdominal arterial calcific deposits on the prediction of cardiovascular disease (CVD) over a long follow-up interval deserves greater scrutiny. Lateral lumbar radiographs were studied as a predictor of incident coronary heart disease (CHD), CVD, and CVD mortality in 1049 men and 1466 women (mean age, 61 years) who were followed from 1967 to 1989. Anterior and posterior wall calcific deposits in the aorta at the level of the first through fourth lumbar vertebrae were graded according to increasing severity using a previously validated rating scale for abdominal aortic calcium (AAC) that ranges from 0 to 24 points. There were 454 cases of CHD, 709 cases of CVD, and 365 CVD deaths. Proportional hazards logistic regression was used to test for associations between AAC and later events after adjustment for age, cigarette use, diabetes mellitus, systolic blood pressure, left ventricular hypertrophy, body mass index, cholesterol, and HDL cholesterol. In comparisons with the lowest AAC tertile, the multivariate age-adjusted relative risks (RR) for CVD were increased in tertile 2 (men: RR, 1.33; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.02 to 1.74; women: RR, 1.25; 95% CI, 0.95 to 1.65) and tertile 3 (men: RR, 1.68; 95% CI, 1.25 to 2.27; women: RR, 1.78; 95% CI, 1.33 to 2.38). Similar results were obtained with CHD and CVD mortality. AAC deposits, detected by lateral lumbar radiograms, are a marker of subclinical atherosclerotic disease and an independent predictor of subsequent vascular morbidity and mortality.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Nephrol Dial Transplant
                ndt
                ndt
                Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation
                Oxford University Press
                0931-0509
                1460-2385
                December 2008
                1 August 2008
                1 August 2008
                : 23
                : 12
                : 4009-4015
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, Helsinki
                [2 ]Department of Rehabilitation, Helsinki University Central Hospital , Espoo, Finland
                [3 ]Department of Nephrology, Uppsala University Hospital , Uppsala, Sweden
                [4 ]Department of Internal Medicine, St. Elisabeth Hospital Tilburg, Tilburg, The Netherlands
                [5 ]Division of Nephrology, Liege University Hospital , Liege, Belgium
                [6 ]Department of Medicine, Trondheim University Hospital , Tronheim, Norway
                [7 ]Department of Nephrology, Gent University Hospital , Gent, Belgium
                [8 ]Odense University Hospital , Odense
                [9 ]Genzyme A/S, Copenhagen, Denmark
                Author notes
                Correspondence and offprint requests to: Eero Honkanen, Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, Helsinki University Central Hospital, PO Box 263, FIN-00131, Helsinki, Finland. Tel: +35-8-9-471-88204; Fax: +35-8-9-417-88-400; E-mail: eero.honkanen@ 123456hus.fi
                [*]

                The list of members of the CORD study group is given in the Appendix.

                Article
                gfn403
                10.1093/ndt/gfn403
                2639067
                18676346
                6f0a76de-17a9-4b05-9c7a-60706f330ed0
                © The Author [2008].

                The online version of this article has been published under an open access model. Users are entitled to use, reproduce, disseminate, or display the open access version of this article for non-commercial purposes provided that: the original authorship is properly and fully attributed; the Journal and Oxford University Press are attributed as the original place of publication with the correct citation details given; if an article is subsequently reproduced or disseminated not in its entirety but only in part or as a derivative work this must be clearly indicated. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

                History
                : 27 February 2008
                : 25 June 2008
                Categories
                Dialysis

                Nephrology
                calcification,dialysis,lateral lumbar radiography,chronic kidney disease,cardiovascular disease

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