Elements of malnutrition-inflammation complex syndrome (MICS) may blunt the responsiveness
of anemia of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) to recombinant human erythropoietin (EPO).
The authors examined cross-sectional associations between the required dose of EPO
within a 13-week interval as prescribed by practicing nephrologists who were blind
to the study and several laboratory values known to be related to nutrition and/or
inflammation, as well as the malnutrition-inflammation score (MIS), which is a fully
quantitative assessment tool based on the subjective global assessment of nutrition.
A total of 339 maintenance hemodialysis (MHD) outpatients, including 181 men, who
were aged 54.7 +/- 14.5 years (mean +/- SD), who had undergone dialysis for 36.3 +/-
33.2 months, were selected randomly from 7 DaVita dialysis units in Los Angeles South/East
Bay area. The average weekly dose of administered recombinant human EPO within a 13-week
interval was 217 +/- 187 U/kg. Patients were receiving intravenous iron supplementation
(iron gluconate or dextran) averaging 39.5 +/- 47.5 mg/wk. The MIS and serum concentrations
of high-sensitivity C-reactive protein, interleukin 6 (IL-6), tumor necrosis factor-alpha,
and lactate dehydrogenase had positive correlation with required EPO dose and EPO
responsiveness index (EPO divided by hemoglobin), whereas serum total iron binding
capacity (TIBC), prealbumin and total cholesterol, as well as blood lymphocyte count
had statistically significant but negative correlations with indices of refractory
anemia. Most correlations remained significant even after multivariate adjustment
for case-mix and anemia factors and other relevant covariates. Similar associations
were noticed across EPO per body weight tertiles via analysis of variance and after
estimating odds ratio for higher versus lower tertile via logistic regression after
same case-mix adjustment.
The existence of elements of MICS as indicated by a high MIS and increased levels
of proinflammatory cytokines such as IL-6 as well as decreased nutritional values
such as low serum concentrations of total cholesterol, prealbumin, and TIBC correlates
with EPO hyporesponsiveness in MHD patients.