急性腎障害後の認知症リスク増加(Increased risk of dementia after acute kidney injury)

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2024-08-26 カロリンスカ研究所(KI)

カロリンスカ研究所の研究によると、急性腎障害(AKI)は認知症のリスクを増加させることが明らかになりました。65歳以上の30万人以上を対象に調査した結果、AKIを経験した人は認知症発症のリスクが49%高く、特にルイ体型認知症やパーキンソン病による認知症のリスクが88%増加しました。この発見は、AKIが腎機能に影響を与えるだけでなく、脳の健康にも広範な影響を与える可能性があることを示唆しています。この知見は早期介入や予防治療に役立つ可能性があります。

<関連情報>

急性腎障害と認知症および特定の認知症タイプとの関連 スウェーデンにおける集団ベースの研究結果 Acute Kidney Injury and Its Association With Dementia and Specific Dementia Types Findings From a Population-Based Study in Sweden

Hong Xu, MD, PhD; Maria Eriksdotter, MD, PhD, Sara Garcia-Ptacek, MD, PhD; Daniel Ferreira, PhD; Dongze Ji, MPH, Annette Bruchfeld, MD, PhD, Yang Xu, PhD; and Juan J. Carrero, Pharm PhD
Neurology  Published:August 22, 2024
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000209751

急性腎障害後の認知症リスク増加(Increased risk of dementia after acute kidney injury)

Abstract

Background and Objectives
Preclinical studies suggest that acute kidney injury (AKI) results in biochemical and pathologic changes in the brain. We aimed to explore the association between experiencing AKI and subsequent risks of developing dementia.

Methods
We conducted a study involving individuals aged 65 years and older in Stockholm from 2006 to 2019, who were free from dementia diagnosis and had data on kidney function. The exposure was an episode of AKI (time varying), ascertained by issued clinical diagnoses and transient creatinine elevations according to Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes criteria. The outcome was all-cause dementia and specific types of dementia, ascertained by clinically confirmed cases in the Swedish registry of cognitive/dementia disorders, the presence of 2 issued dementia diagnoses in outpatient care, or initiation of specific antidementia medications. We investigated associations with dementia through Cox proportional hazard regression by AKI, severity levels of AKI, AKI recurrence, and setting (community-acquired or hospital-acquired AKI).

Results
We included 305,122 individuals with a median age of 75 ± 8 years (56.6% women). During a median follow-up of 12.3 (interquartile range 8.7–13.3) years, there were 79,888 individuals (26%) suffering from at least 1 episode of AKI and 47,938 incident cases (16%) of dementia. The rate of dementia cases was 37.0 per 1,000 person-years (95% CI 36.2–37.8) after developing AKI, which was approximately 2 times higher than the rate observed during the periods before AKI (17.3, 95% CI 17.2–17.5). After multivariable adjustment, developing AKI was associated with a 49% higher rate of subsequent dementia (adjusted hazard ratio hazard ratio [HR] 1.49, 95% CI 1.45–1.53). This pattern was consistent across dementia types, with HRs of 1.88 (95% CI 1.53–2.32), 1.47 (1.38–1.56), and 1.31 (1.25–1.38) for dementia with Lewy bodies and Parkinson disease with dementia, vascular dementia, and Alzheimer dementia, respectively. Risk associations were stronger in magnitude across more severe AKIs and in hospital-acquired vs community-acquired AKI.

Discussion
Individuals who experienced an AKI were at increased risk of receiving a diagnosis of dementia.

医療・健康
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