Cardiovascular Diseases Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Complex Evaluation of the Cardiovascular Risk in the Kidney Transplant Patients
Kidney transplantation (KT) represents the best treatment for patients with end-stage kidney
disease, being associated with improved outcomes and reduced mortality. Although the survival
benefit with KT is mostly attributable to reduction in cardiovascular (CV) disease, KT
recipients continue to remain at higher risk for CV-related morbidity and mortality when
compared with the general population. Additionally, CV events represent the leading cause of
death in KT recipients with a functioning allograft. KT recipients have high rates of
hospitalization for myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, dysrhythmias, stroke,
malignant hypertension, and cardiac arrest. Significant amounts of research have been aimed
at reducing event rates, primarily aimed at understanding prevalent risk factors, defining
outcomes, and application of guideline-based care.
The post-KT milieu represents the confluence of several traditional and nontraditional CV
risk factors contributing to the significant CV risk in this population. CV disease remains
an understudied and undertreated source of morbidity and mortality in KT patients. Patients
with chronic kidney disease (CKD) are generally excluded from major cardiovascular outcome
trials, and this phenomenon of aversion to including patients with CKD in CV trials and
providing appropriate goal-directed medical and interventional therapies (renalism) extends
into KT .
The main aim of this study is to evaluate holistically the CV risk in a KT population. The
investigators will compare bioimpedance spectroscopy derived fluid status parameters
(overhydration, total body water, extracellular water and intracellular water) with clinical
evaluation, lung ultrasonography, pulse wave velocity, different biomarkers, and
echocardiographic characteristics and also to determine the impact of these parameters on
renal and CV outcomes in the same population.
• Patients:
The inclusion criteria are:
1. age>18 years;
2. KT recipient.
The exclusion criteria are:
1. metallic joint prostheses, cardiac stent or pacemakers, decompensated cirrhosis,
pregnancy and limb amputations (due to bioimpedance technique limitations);
2. no prior diagnosis of pulmonary fibrosis, pneumectomy or massive pleural effusion (due
to lung ultrasonography limitations);
3. active systemic infections (due to difficulties in the interpretation of nespecific
inflammation biomarkers in this type of patients);
4. absence of congenital heart disease;
5. eGFR below 30 ml/min/1.73m2;
6. KT vintage of at least 6 months.
- Methods:
All patients will have a complete clinical and paraclinical evaluation:
- Personal data (age, sex, height);
- Cardiovascular risk factors (smoking, weight, body mass index);
- Medication (including immunosupression);
- Kidney transplantation data (date of transplantation, type - living or cadaveric donor,
missmatch number, type of induction therapy);
- Dialysis vintage (before KT)
- Comorbidities (diabetes, hypertension, stroke, coronary artery disease, etc);
- Physical examination (blood pressure, crackles, pedal edema etc);
- Renal function evaluation (serum urea and creatinine, serum electrolytes - K, Na, Cl)
- Nutrition status evaluation: serum protein, cholesterol, triglycerides;
- Inflammation evaluation: CRP;
- Serum glucose and uric acid;
- Hemoleucogram;
- Electrocardiogram.
Bioimpedance spectroscopy analysis This analysis will be performed at baseline using the
portable whole-body multifrequency bioimpedance analysis device (BCM®Body Composition Monitor
- Fresenius Medical Care D GmbH). The technique involves attaching electrodes to the
patient's forearm and ipsilateral ankle, with the patient in a supine position. The BCM®
measures the body resistance and reactance to electrical currents of 50 discrete frequencies,
ranging between 5 and 1000 kHz. Based on a fluid model using these resistances, the
extracellular water (ECW), the intracellular water (ICW) and the total body water (TBW) are
calculated. These volumes are then used to determine the amount of fluid overload. All
calculations are automatically performed by the software of the BCM® device. Absolute fluid
overload (AFO) is is defined as the difference between the expected patient's ECW under
normal physiological conditions and the actual ECW, whereas the relative fluid overload (RFO)
is defined as the absolute fluid overload AFO to ECW ratio. Normohydration is defined when
AFO is between the 10th and the 90th percentile for healthy, age- and gender-matched
individuals from the reference population, i.e. between -1.1 to +1.1 L, while volumes below
and above this range defining underhydration and overhydration, respectively. In addition,
this analysis will provide the LTI and FTI for the included patients.
Echocardiography Echocardiographic evaluations will be made in each patient at baseline. All
echocardiographic measurements will be carried out according to the recommendations of the
American Society of Echocardiography by an observer unaware of the lung ultrasound and
bioimpedance results. Echocardiographic evaluation will provide information about cardiac
anatomy (e.g. volumes, geometry, mass) and function (e.g. left ventricular function and wall
motion, valvular function, right ventricular function, pulmonary artery pressure,
pericardium).
Lung ultrasonography Examinations will be performed in the supine position. Scanning of the
anterior and lateral chest will be performed on both sides of the chest, from the second to
the fourth (on the right side to the fifth) intercostal spaces, at parasternal to
mid-axillary lines. B-lines will be recorded in each intercostal space and were defined as a
hyperechoic, coherent US bundle at narrow basis going from the transducer to the limit of the
screen. B-lines starting from the pleural line can be either localized or scattered to the
whole lung and be present as isolated or multiple artifacts. The sum of B-lines produces a
score reflecting the extent of lung water accumulation (0 being no detectable B-line).
Arterial stiffness Arterial stiffness assessment will be performed by applanation tonometry
(SphygmoCorTM; PWV Inc., Westmead, Sydney, Australia) with the patient being recumbent, 10
minutes before the measures were done. The carotid and femoral pulse will be acquired by
applanation tonometry sequentially, allowing a single operator to acquire the measurement.
The transit time from the R-wave of the simultaneously acquired electrocardiogram to the foot
of the carotid and femoral pulse is measured. The difference acquired electrocardiogram to
the foot of the carotid and femoral pulse is measured. The difference between these 2 transit
times is divided by distances measured from the body surface to estimate the arterial path
length in order to calculate carotid-femoral PWV. The SphygmoCor PWV has been established in
the literature as a reference for comparison due to the wealth of population data and healthy
population refence values. The investigators will determine two PWVs for every patient and
use the media for the statistical analysis. If the difference between these two measurements
will be higher than 0.5 m/s then another determination will be performed and the median will
be used for analysis.
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