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THE ASSESSMENT OF VASCULAR CALCIFICATION, ARTERIAL STIFFNESS, AND NUTRITIONAL STATUS IN PATIENTS ON HEMODIALYSIS, A 5-YEAR FOLLOW-UP STUDY

YELDA ÖZTÜRK, ŞİYAR ERDOĞMUŞ, ZEYNEP KENDİ ÇELEBİ, MERVE GÜNER, MELTEM HALİL, NEVAL DUMAN

Ankara Üniversitesi Tıp Fakültesi Mecmuası - 2023;76(4):316-322

 

Objectives: This study aimed to find out the relationship between vascular calcification, arterial stiffness, and nutritional status, and investigate their effects on 5-year mortality. Materials and Methods: This study included 79 hemodialysis patients. Fetuin-A and FGF-23 levels were measured. The average blood pressure (BP) of the previous 12 months was used. The abdominal aortic calcification (AAC) score was measured from lateral abdominal radiographs. Carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (cf-PWV) was used for arterial stiffness assessment. The geriatric nutritional risk index (GNRI) was used for nutritional status, and calculated as the following formula; [14.89*serum albumin (g/dL)] + (41.7* body weight/ideal body weight). Results: Twenty-five (31.6%) of 79 patients died within 5 years. When the alive and deceased groups were compared age (p=0.001), diabetes mellitus (p=0.041), GNRI (p=0.019), AAC score (p=0.009), cf-PWV (p=0.003), albumin (p=0.030), C-reactive protein (p=0.003), mean systolic BP before dialysis (p=0.018), and mean diastolic BP before dialysis (p=0.045) were significantly different between two groups, whereas Fetuin-A and FGF-23 were not. AAC score above 3 points [area under the curve (AUC): 0.682], cf-PWV above 8.1 (AUC: 0.727), and GNRI score 99.2 and lower (AUC: 0.663) had estimated 5-year mortality well. GNRI was the only independent variable (hazard ratio: 0.924, p=0.047) in multivariable cox regression analysis. Conclusion: There was a close relationship between AAC score, GNRI, cf-PWV, and long-term mortality. The cf-PWV and its close relationship with average BP measurements must be assessed for future studies. Following GNRI must be targeted for its crucial role as an independent factor of mortality.