Kidney biopsy results versus clinical parameters on mortality and ESRD progression in 2687 patients with glomerulonephritis

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Kidney biopsy results versus clinical parameters on mortality and ESRD progression in 2687 patients with glomerulonephritis. / Haider, Dominik G; Masghati, Salome; Goliasch, Georg; Mouhieddine, Mohamed; Wolzt, Michael; Fuhrmann, Valentin; Hörl, Walter H; Kaider, Alexandra; Soleiman, Afschin.

In: EUR J CLIN INVEST, Vol. 44, No. 6, 01.06.2014, p. 578-86.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Haider, DG, Masghati, S, Goliasch, G, Mouhieddine, M, Wolzt, M, Fuhrmann, V, Hörl, WH, Kaider, A & Soleiman, A 2014, 'Kidney biopsy results versus clinical parameters on mortality and ESRD progression in 2687 patients with glomerulonephritis', EUR J CLIN INVEST, vol. 44, no. 6, pp. 578-86. https://doi.org/10.1111/eci.12274

APA

Haider, D. G., Masghati, S., Goliasch, G., Mouhieddine, M., Wolzt, M., Fuhrmann, V., Hörl, W. H., Kaider, A., & Soleiman, A. (2014). Kidney biopsy results versus clinical parameters on mortality and ESRD progression in 2687 patients with glomerulonephritis. EUR J CLIN INVEST, 44(6), 578-86. https://doi.org/10.1111/eci.12274

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{0dd91502f47840a7beb4675de3cc1aa1,
title = "Kidney biopsy results versus clinical parameters on mortality and ESRD progression in 2687 patients with glomerulonephritis",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Physicians refer proteinuric patients to kidney biopsy in order to clarify the issue of underlying renal disease. We compared kidney biopsy results with classical outcome parameters in a large cohort of patients with biopsy proven glomerulonephritis (GN).METHODS: In a retrospective analysis, 2687 patients with different forms of GN from 123 Austrian centres were investigated. Patient characteristics, the diagnosis of GN and its respective subtype and clinical symptoms such as arterial hypertension, haematuria, amount of proteinuria and estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) were tested for their association with all-cause mortality and progression to end-stage renal disease (ESRD).RESULTS: During a median follow-up of 129·9 months (IQR 89·6; 177·7), 688 patients (25·6%) died and 718 patients required dialysis (29·4%). In multivariate Cox's regression analysis age (HR 1·06), female sex (HR 0·71), eGFR (HR 0·74), the diagnosis of GN and its subtypes predicted patient survival (all P < 0·01), whereas the amount of proteinuria was not associated with patient survival. The incidence of progression to ESRD was associated with female sex (HR 0·71), eGFR (HR 0·65), amount of proteinuria (HR 1·15) and the diagnosis of GN and its subtypes (all P < 0·01). Nephrotic or nephritic syndromes were not associated with patient survival or progression to ESRD and did not add further predictive value to outcome of GN.CONCLUSIONS: Our study demonstrates histological diagnosis of GN and its specific subtype predicts patient survival and dialysis incidence. Therefore, kidney biopsy should be an integral part of routine diagnostic assessment in patients with any forms of suspected GN.",
author = "Haider, {Dominik G} and Salome Masghati and Georg Goliasch and Mohamed Mouhieddine and Michael Wolzt and Valentin Fuhrmann and H{\"o}rl, {Walter H} and Alexandra Kaider and Afschin Soleiman",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2014 Stichting European Society for Clinical Investigation Journal Foundation.",
year = "2014",
month = jun,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1111/eci.12274",
language = "English",
volume = "44",
pages = "578--86",
journal = "EUR J CLIN INVEST",
issn = "0014-2972",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Kidney biopsy results versus clinical parameters on mortality and ESRD progression in 2687 patients with glomerulonephritis

AU - Haider, Dominik G

AU - Masghati, Salome

AU - Goliasch, Georg

AU - Mouhieddine, Mohamed

AU - Wolzt, Michael

AU - Fuhrmann, Valentin

AU - Hörl, Walter H

AU - Kaider, Alexandra

AU - Soleiman, Afschin

N1 - © 2014 Stichting European Society for Clinical Investigation Journal Foundation.

PY - 2014/6/1

Y1 - 2014/6/1

N2 - BACKGROUND: Physicians refer proteinuric patients to kidney biopsy in order to clarify the issue of underlying renal disease. We compared kidney biopsy results with classical outcome parameters in a large cohort of patients with biopsy proven glomerulonephritis (GN).METHODS: In a retrospective analysis, 2687 patients with different forms of GN from 123 Austrian centres were investigated. Patient characteristics, the diagnosis of GN and its respective subtype and clinical symptoms such as arterial hypertension, haematuria, amount of proteinuria and estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) were tested for their association with all-cause mortality and progression to end-stage renal disease (ESRD).RESULTS: During a median follow-up of 129·9 months (IQR 89·6; 177·7), 688 patients (25·6%) died and 718 patients required dialysis (29·4%). In multivariate Cox's regression analysis age (HR 1·06), female sex (HR 0·71), eGFR (HR 0·74), the diagnosis of GN and its subtypes predicted patient survival (all P < 0·01), whereas the amount of proteinuria was not associated with patient survival. The incidence of progression to ESRD was associated with female sex (HR 0·71), eGFR (HR 0·65), amount of proteinuria (HR 1·15) and the diagnosis of GN and its subtypes (all P < 0·01). Nephrotic or nephritic syndromes were not associated with patient survival or progression to ESRD and did not add further predictive value to outcome of GN.CONCLUSIONS: Our study demonstrates histological diagnosis of GN and its specific subtype predicts patient survival and dialysis incidence. Therefore, kidney biopsy should be an integral part of routine diagnostic assessment in patients with any forms of suspected GN.

AB - BACKGROUND: Physicians refer proteinuric patients to kidney biopsy in order to clarify the issue of underlying renal disease. We compared kidney biopsy results with classical outcome parameters in a large cohort of patients with biopsy proven glomerulonephritis (GN).METHODS: In a retrospective analysis, 2687 patients with different forms of GN from 123 Austrian centres were investigated. Patient characteristics, the diagnosis of GN and its respective subtype and clinical symptoms such as arterial hypertension, haematuria, amount of proteinuria and estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) were tested for their association with all-cause mortality and progression to end-stage renal disease (ESRD).RESULTS: During a median follow-up of 129·9 months (IQR 89·6; 177·7), 688 patients (25·6%) died and 718 patients required dialysis (29·4%). In multivariate Cox's regression analysis age (HR 1·06), female sex (HR 0·71), eGFR (HR 0·74), the diagnosis of GN and its subtypes predicted patient survival (all P < 0·01), whereas the amount of proteinuria was not associated with patient survival. The incidence of progression to ESRD was associated with female sex (HR 0·71), eGFR (HR 0·65), amount of proteinuria (HR 1·15) and the diagnosis of GN and its subtypes (all P < 0·01). Nephrotic or nephritic syndromes were not associated with patient survival or progression to ESRD and did not add further predictive value to outcome of GN.CONCLUSIONS: Our study demonstrates histological diagnosis of GN and its specific subtype predicts patient survival and dialysis incidence. Therefore, kidney biopsy should be an integral part of routine diagnostic assessment in patients with any forms of suspected GN.

U2 - 10.1111/eci.12274

DO - 10.1111/eci.12274

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 24749685

VL - 44

SP - 578

EP - 586

JO - EUR J CLIN INVEST

JF - EUR J CLIN INVEST

SN - 0014-2972

IS - 6

ER -