TY - JOUR
T1 - Vitamin D deficiency and anemia in early chronic kidney disease
AU - Patel, Neha M.
AU - Gutiérrez, Orlando M.
AU - Andress, Dennis L.
AU - Coyne, Daniel W.
AU - Levin, Adeera
AU - Wolf, Myles
N1 - Funding Information:
Funding for the original study and its data collection were supported by grant from Abbott Laboratories. For this study, all of the hypotheses and analyses were generated and tested by the authors independent of industry support. We acknowledge the work of the SEEK Advisory Panel: Drs Dennis L. Andress, George L. Bakris, Adeera Levin, and Mark Molitch; and the SEEK investigators: Drs Allen Adolphe, Iftikhar Ahmad, Michael Alexander, Diego X. Alvarez, Gustavo A. Alza, Dennis Andress, James Andrews, Abraham Areephanthu, Carlos R. Arguello, Carl Augustus, Dwight L. Bailey, Ronald E. Ballek, Ernesto E. Banalagay, Saad E. Bedeir, Andrew J. Behnke, Sabrina Benjamin, Marializa V. Bernardo, Jayantilal Bhimani, Edward Braun, Bernard Buchanan, Mary Carol Greenlee, Laurence Carroll, Chaim Charytan, Indira Chervu, William H. Cleveland, Lou Constan, Deena Craig, James Cuellar, Albert M. Defabritus, Amar Desai, Rajnish Dhingra, Douglass Domoto, Michael W. Early Sr, Andrew E. Edin, David Evanko, Stephen Fadem, Timothy Fagan, Michael Fedak, Bradford T. Flagg, Brad Frandsen, Jeffery Freesemann, Linda Freilich, Stuart Friedman, Susan Fullemann, Dinesh R. Gandhi, Steven R. Ginos, Daniel Goodman, Burk Gossom, Catherine Grellet, Stephanie Gunnoe, Roger J. Haley, Rekha D. Halligan, Daniel Halm, Maxine E. Hamilton, Laila C. Hanna, Merfat Hassan, George Herron, Peck P. Hsu, Yiling Huang, Scott Isaacs, Shah Islam, Peter Jacobson, Albert F. Johary, Ronald W. Johnson, Alan Jones, Regi Joseph, Lionel B. Katchem, Bruce A. Kauk, Rebecca Knight, David Koeper, Lawrence Kramer, Gerald Kumin, Stella S. Kwong, David Lahasky, Vinodrai Lakhani, Rachel Langland, Chok Lee, Irene Leech, Daniel J. Legault, Lawrence Lehrner, April Liverman, James Love, Joshua Lowentritt, Blanca Luna, Michael Macadams, Isam Marar, Eric Marcotte, Steven Margolis, Eric Marshall, Carlos O. Martinez, Janus Maybee, Gela Mchedlishvili, Donald J. Meyer, Kenneth Miller, James Miller Oppy, Palghat V. Mohan, Ramakant Mulay, Derek Muse, Rhonda I. Museums, Kent W. Myers, Seymour Myers, Arif Nazir, Patrick Ogilvie, Kevin W. Ohara, Paul Pagnozzi, Meyappan Palaniappan, Saradha Perinbasekar, Marvin Pietruszka, George E. Platt, John H. Poehlman, Peterman Prosser, Alan D. Purdy, Gary Raffel, David Ramstad, Harvey Resnick, Wayne Reynolds, Louis Reznick, Matt Rosenberg, Paul Rosenblit, Roset N. Samuel, Rallabhandi Sankaram, Deepak Santram, Neil Schwartzman, Peter Scuccimarri, Gladstone Sellers, Chandrakant Shah, Jeffery G. Shanes, Devendra K. Sharma, Michael Scheaffer, Raewyn Shell, Terry Sherraden, Anil Sheth, Thomas Shetter, Phillip Shou, Haven Silver, George A. Smith, Karen L. Smith, Donna Steadman, Helen Story, David C. Subich, Robert M. Taxin, Gary Tigges, Robert W. Tom, Thomas Tse, Umamaheswara Vejendla, Samuel Verzosa, William C. Ware, Robert Weiss, Lindsey White, Richard Woronoff, Alberto Yataco, Raja Zabaneh, Mayer Zayan.
PY - 2010/4
Y1 - 2010/4
N2 - Vitamin D has a number of pleiotropic effects in a variety of tissues, in addition to its well-known effects on mineral metabolism. To determine whether it has an effect on erythropoiesis, we studied the association of the components of the vitamin D axis with the prevalence and severity of anemia in chronic kidney disease. We measured the concentrations of 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25D), 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (1,25D), and hemoglobin in a cross-sectional study of 1661 subjects in SEEK, a multi-center cohort study of chronic kidney disease patients in the United States, of whom 41% met the criteria for anemia. The mean hemoglobin concentrations significantly decreased with decreasing tertiles of 25D and 1,25D. These linear trends remained significant after adjustment for age, gender, ethnicity, eGFR, diabetes, and parathyroid hormone. In similarly adjusted models, the lowest tertiles of 25D and 1,25D were independently associated with 2.8-and 2.0-fold increased prevalence of anemia compared with their respective highest tertiles. Patients with severe dual deficiency of 25D and 1,25D had a 5.4-fold prevalence of anemia compared with those replete in both. Our study shows that 25D and 1,25D deficiency are independently associated with decreased hemoglobin levels and anemia in chronic kidney disease. Whether this association is causal requires further study.
AB - Vitamin D has a number of pleiotropic effects in a variety of tissues, in addition to its well-known effects on mineral metabolism. To determine whether it has an effect on erythropoiesis, we studied the association of the components of the vitamin D axis with the prevalence and severity of anemia in chronic kidney disease. We measured the concentrations of 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25D), 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (1,25D), and hemoglobin in a cross-sectional study of 1661 subjects in SEEK, a multi-center cohort study of chronic kidney disease patients in the United States, of whom 41% met the criteria for anemia. The mean hemoglobin concentrations significantly decreased with decreasing tertiles of 25D and 1,25D. These linear trends remained significant after adjustment for age, gender, ethnicity, eGFR, diabetes, and parathyroid hormone. In similarly adjusted models, the lowest tertiles of 25D and 1,25D were independently associated with 2.8-and 2.0-fold increased prevalence of anemia compared with their respective highest tertiles. Patients with severe dual deficiency of 25D and 1,25D had a 5.4-fold prevalence of anemia compared with those replete in both. Our study shows that 25D and 1,25D deficiency are independently associated with decreased hemoglobin levels and anemia in chronic kidney disease. Whether this association is causal requires further study.
KW - Anemia
KW - Chronic kidney disease
KW - Vitamin D
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=77950520947&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1038/ki.2009.551
DO - 10.1038/ki.2009.551
M3 - Article
C2 - 20130525
AN - SCOPUS:77950520947
SN - 0085-2538
VL - 77
SP - 715
EP - 720
JO - Kidney International
JF - Kidney International
IS - 8
ER -