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Preventive Medicine 2010-Nov

Correlates of kidney stone disease differ by race in a multi-ethnic middle-aged population: the ARIC study.

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Il collegamento viene salvato negli appunti
Saloua Akoudad
Moyses Szklo
Mara A McAdams
Tibor Fulop
Cheryl A M Anderson
Josef Coresh
Anna Köttgen

Parole chiave

Astratto

OBJECTIVE

To identify correlates of kidney stone disease in white and African American men and women in a population-based longitudinal study starting in four US communities, and to assess differences in correlates across racial groups.

METHODS

Between 1993 and 1995, 12,161 middle-aged participants of the ARIC Study provided information on history of kidney stone disease. Information on incident kidney stone-related hospitalizations was obtained from ICD codes on hospital discharge records.

RESULTS

Kidney stone disease was reported by 12.0% of men and 4.8% of women. After multivariable adjustment, prevalent kidney stone disease was significantly (p<0.05) associated with male gender (PR=2.50), increased serum triglycerides (PR=1.07 per SD increase), diabetes (PR=1.27), gallstone disease (PR=1.54), white race (PR=1.67), and region of residence. Male gender (HR=1.70), diabetes (HR=1.98), and hypertension (HR=1.69) were significantly associated (p<0.05) with incident kidney stone-related hospitalizations (n=94). Race-stratified analyses showed stronger associations of prevalent kidney stone disease with increased triglycerides, older age, and gallstone disease in African Americans compared to whites, whereas male gender showed stronger association in whites (all p-interaction<0.05).

CONCLUSIONS

We identified novel correlates of kidney stone disease (triglycerides, gallstone disease) and risk factor interactions by race (age, male gender, triglycerides, gallstone disease).

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