Kidney disease as a risk factor for development of cardiovascular disease: a statement from the American Heart Association Councils on Kidney in Cardiovascular …

MJ Sarnak, AS Levey, AC Schoolwerth, J Coresh… - Circulation, 2003 - Am Heart Assoc
MJ Sarnak, AS Levey, AC Schoolwerth, J Coresh, B Culleton, LL Hamm, PA McCullough
Circulation, 2003Am Heart Assoc
Chronic kidney disease1 (CKD) is a worldwide public health problem. In the United States,
there is a rising incidence and prevalence of kidney failure, with poor outcomes and high
cost. The number of individuals with kidney failure treated by dialysis and transplantation
exceeded 320 000 in 1998 and is expected to surpass 650 000 by 2010. 1, 2 There is an
even higher prevalence of earlier stages of CKD (Table 1). 1, 3 Kidney failure requiring
treatment with dialysis or transplantation is the most visible outcome of CKD. However …
Chronic kidney disease1 (CKD) is a worldwide public health problem. In the United States, there is a rising incidence and prevalence of kidney failure, with poor outcomes and high cost. The number of individuals with kidney failure treated by dialysis and transplantation exceeded 320 000 in 1998 and is expected to surpass 650 000 by 2010. 1, 2 There is an even higher prevalence of earlier stages of CKD (Table 1). 1, 3 Kidney failure requiring treatment with dialysis or transplantation is the most visible outcome of CKD. However, cardiovascular disease (CVD) is also frequently associated with CKD, which is important because individuals with CKD are more likely to die of CVD than to develop kidney failure, 4 CVD in CKD is treatable and potentially preventable, and CKD appears to be a risk factor for CVD. In 1998, the National Kidney Foundation (NKF) Task Force on Cardiovascular Disease in Chronic Renal Disease issued a report emphasizing the high risk of CVD in CKD. 5 This report showed that there was a high prevalence of CVD in CKD and that mortality due to CVD was 10 to 30 times higher in dialysis patients than in the general population (Figure 1 and Table 2). 6–18 The task force recommended that patients with CKD be considered in the “highest risk group” for subsequent CVD events and that treatment recommendations based on CVD risk stratification should take into account the highest-risk status of patients with CKD.
The major goal of this statement is to review CKD as a risk factor for development of CVD. As background, we shall also review the definition of CKD and classification of stages of severity of CKD, the spectrum of CVD in CKD and differences from the general population, and risk factors for CVD in CKD.
Am Heart Assoc