Serum Trimethylamine-N-Oxide is Elevated in CKD and Correlates with Coronary Atherosclerosis Burden

Jason R. Stubbs(University of Kansas Medical Center), John A. House(Saint Luke's Hospital), Andrew J. Ocque, Shiqin Zhang(University of Kansas Medical Center), Cassandra Johnson(University of Kansas Medical Center), Cassandra Kimber(University of Kansas Medical Center), Kyle Schmidt(University of Kansas Medical Center), Aditi Gupta(University of Kansas Medical Center), James B. Wetmore(Hennepin County Medical Center), Thomas D. Nolin(University of Pittsburgh), John A. Spertus(Saint Luke's Health System), Alan S.L. Yu(University of Kansas Medical Center)
Journal of the American Society of Nephrology
July 31, 2015
Cited by 438Open Access
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Abstract

Trimethlyamine-N-oxide (TMAO) was recently identified as a promoter of atherosclerosis. Patients with CKD exhibit accelerated development of atherosclerosis; however, no studies have explored the relationship between TMAO and atherosclerosis formation in this group. This study measured serum concentrations and urinary excretion of TMAO in a CKD cohort (n=104), identified the effect of renal transplant on serum TMAO concentration in a subset of these patients (n=6), and explored the cross-sectional relationship between serum TMAO and coronary atherosclerosis burden in a separate CKD cohort (n=220) undergoing coronary angiography. Additional exploratory analyses examined the relationship between baseline serum TMAO and long-term survival after coronary angiography. Serum TMAO concentrations demonstrated a strong inverse association with eGFR (r(2)=0.31, P<0.001). TMAO concentrations were markedly higher in patients receiving dialysis (median [interquartile range], 94.4 μM [54.8-133.0 μM] for dialysis-dependent patients versus 3.3 μM [3.1-6.0 μM] for healthy controls; P<0.001); whereas renal transplantation resulted in substantial reductions in TMAO concentrations (median [min-max] 71.2 μM [29.2-189.7 μM] pretransplant versus 11.4 μM [8.9-20.2 μM] post-transplant; P=0.03). TMAO concentration was an independent predictor for coronary atherosclerosis burden (P=0.02) and predicted long-term mortality independent of traditional cardiac risk factors (hazard ratio, 1.26 per 10 μM increment in TMAO concentration; 95% confidence interval, 1.13 to 1.40; P<0.001). In conclusion, serum TMAO concentrations substantially increase with decrements in kidney function, and this effect is reversed by renal transplantation. Increased TMAO concentrations correlate with coronary atherosclerosis burden and may associate with long-term mortality in patients with CKD undergoing coronary angiography.


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