Gender-specific risk factors and outcomes of hyperkalemia in CKD patients: smoking as a driver of hyperkalemia in men

José Manuel Valdivielso(Universitat de Lleida), Sol Carriazo(Instituto de Salud Carlos III), Marisa Martín(Universitat de Lleida), Beatriz Fernández‐Fernández(Instituto de Salud Carlos III), Marcelino Bermúdez-López(Universitat de Lleida), Alberto Ortíz(Instituto de Salud Carlos III), NEFRONA investigators(Complejo Hospitalario de Navarra), Aladrén Regidor(Complejo Hospitalario de Navarra), Jaume Almirall(Complejo Hospitalario de Navarra), Esther Ponz(Complejo Hospitalario de Navarra), Arteaga Coloma, Bajo Rubio, Díaz Ma Auxiliadora, Montserrat Belart Rodríguez, Antonio Gascón, Jordi Bover Sanjuán, Josep Bronsoms Artero, J.B. Cabezuelo, Salomé Muray Cases, Jesús Calviño Varela, Pilar Caro Acevedo, Jordi Carreras Bassa, Aleix Cases Amenós, Elisabet Massó Jiménez, Rosario Moreno López, Secundino Cigarrán, Saray López Prieto, Lourdes Comas Mongay, Isabel Comerma, Ma Teresa Compte Jové, Marta Cuberes Izquierdo, Fernando de Álvaro, Covadonga Hevia Ojanguren, Gabriel de Arriba de la Fuente, María Dolores del Pino y Pino, Rafael Diaz-Tejeiro Izquierdo, Marta Dotori, Verónica Duarte, Sara Estupiñan Torres, María José Fernández‐Reyes, Ma Loreto Fernández Rodríguez(Instituto de Salud Carlos III), Guillermina Fernández, Antonio Galán Serrano, César García Cantón, Antonio Luis García Herrera, Mercedes García Mena, Luis Gil Sacaluga, María Aguilar, José Luis Górriz, Emma Huarte Loza, José Luis Lerma, A. Cañada, Jesús Pedro Marín Álvarez, Nádia Martín Alemany, Jesús Martín García(Instituto de Salud Carlos III), Alberto Martínez Castelao, María Martínez Villaescusa, Isabel Martínez, Iñigo Moina Eguren, Silvia Moreno Los Huertos, Ricardo Mouzo Mirco, Antonia Munar Vila, Ana Beatriz Muñoz Díaz, Juan F. Navarro‐González, Javier Nieto, Agustín Carreño, Enrique Novoa Fernández(Instituto de Salud Carlos III), Alberto Ortíz(Instituto de Salud Carlos III), Beatriz Fernández, Vicente Paraíso, Miguel Pérez Fontán, Ana Peris Domingo, Celestino Piñera Haces, Ma Dolores Prados Garrido, Mario Prieto Velasco, Carmina Puig Marí, Maite Rivera Gorrín, Esther Rubio, M. Pilar Ruiz, Mercedes Salgueira Lazo, Ana Isabel Martínez Puerto, José Antonio Sánchez Tomero(Instituto de Salud Carlos III), José Emilio Hernández Sánchez, Ramon Sans Lorman, Ramón Saracho, Maria‐Rosa Sarrias, Daniel Serón, María José Soler, Clara Barrios, Fernando Henrique Sousa, Daniel Toran, Fernando Tornero Molina, José Javier Usón Carrasco, Ildefonso Valera Cortes, Ma Merce Vilaprinyo del Perugia, Rafael C Virto Ruiz
Clinical Kidney Journal
October 9, 2023
Cited by 9Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Background: Hyperkalemia is common among patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) but there is scarce information on differential risk factors and outcomes for men and women. For instance, smoking has been suggested to be a risk factor for hyperkalemia, but specific analysis of the sex-specific impact of smoking on hyperkalemia in CKD is lacking. Methods: We studied serum potassium levels in 2891 participants from the NEFRONA cohort: 483 controls (47% women) and 2408 CKD patients (38% women) without prior cardiovascular disease (CVD), assessing whether smoking is a risk factor for hyperkalemia, and if hyperkalemia is associated with outcomes separately for men and women. Results: Median potassium levels and prevalence of hypo and hyperkalemia were higher in CKD participants than in controls. Serum potassium levels were higher and hyperkalemia and severe hyperkalemia more prevalent in men than in women with non-dialysis CKD (G3-G5). The highest prevalence of hyperkalemia for each gender was found in CKD G4-G5 and hemodialysis patients for men (46%) and in hemodialysis (54%) for women. Gender-specific etiological multivariate analysis identified current smoking as a risk factor for hyperkalemia only in men. Hyperkalemia was independently associated with stopping RAASi, an outcome which was more common in women. Hyperkalemia was also associated to higher risk of cardiovascular events within 4 years in men. In conclusion, hyperkalemia is common among men and women with CKD, but the prevalence, risk factors and outcomes may differ by gender. Specifically, current smoking is a driver of hyperkalemia in men.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis