Jared J. Grantham, M.D., Vicente E. Torres, M.D., Arlene B. Chapman, M.D., Lisa M. Guay-Woodford, M.D., Kyongtae T. Bae, M.D., Ph.D., Bernard F. King, Jr., M.D., Louis H. Wetzel, M.D., Deborah A. Baumgarten, M.D., Phillip J. Kenney, M.D., Peter C. Harris, Ph.D., Saulo Klahr, M.D., William M. Bennett, M.D., Gladys N. Hirschman, M.D., Catherine M. Meyers, M.D., Xiaoling Zhang, M.S., Fang Zhu, M.D., John P. Miller, A.B., for the CRISP Investigators
Background Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD)is characterized by progressive enlargement of cyst-filled kidneys.
Methods In a three-year study, we measured the rates of changein total kidney volume, total cyst volume, and iothalamate clearancein patients with ADPKD. Of a total of 241 patients, in 232 patientswithout azotemia who were 15 to 46 years old at baseline weused magnetic-resonance imaging to correlate the total kidneyvolume and total cyst volume with iothalamate clearance. Statisticalmethods included analysis of variance, Pearson correlation,and multivariate regression analysis.
Results Total kidney volume and total cyst volume increasedexponentially, a result consistent with an expansion processdependent on growth. The mean (±SD) total kidney volumewas 1060±642 ml at baseline and increased by a mean of204±246 ml (5.27±3.92 percent per year, P<0.001)over a three-year period among 214 patients. Total cyst volumeincreased by 218±263 ml (P<0.001) during the sameperiod among 210 patients. The baseline total kidney volumepredicted the subsequent rate of increase in volume, independentlyof age. A baseline total kidney volume above 1500 ml in 51 patientswas associated with a declining glomerular filtration rate (by4.33±8.07 ml per minute per year, P<0.001). Totalkidney volume increased more in 135 patients with PKD1 mutations(by 245±268 ml) than in 28 patients with PKD2 mutations(by 136±100 ml, P=0.03).
Conclusions Kidney enlargement resulting from the expansionof cysts in patients with ADPKD is continuous and quantifiableand is associated with the decline of renal function. Higherrates of kidney enlargement are associated with a more rapiddecrease in renal function.
Source Information
From the Kidney Institute and the Department of Internal Medicine, Kansas University Medical Center, Kansas City (J.J.G., L.H.W.); the Division of Nephrology and Hypertension (V.E.T., P.C.H.) and the Department of Radiology (B.F.K.), Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, Minn.; the Division of Nephrology, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta (A.B.C., D.A.B.); the Departments of Medicine (Renal Division) and Radiology, University of Alabama School of Medicine at Birmingham, Birmingham (L.M.G.-W., P.J.K.); the Departments of Radiology (K.T.B., F.Z.), Medicine (S.K.), and Biostatistics (X.Z., J.P.M.), Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis; Legacy Good Samaritan Hospital, Portland, Oreg. (W.M.B.); and the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md. (G.N.H., C.M.M.).
Address reprint requests to Dr. Grantham at the Kidney Institute, Maildrop 3018, Department of Internal Medicine, Kansas University Medical Center, 3901 Rainbow Blvd., Kansas City, KS 66160, or at jgrantha{at}kumc.edu.
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