Ambulatory arterial stiffness index and its role in assessing arterial stiffness in dialysis patients.

J Hypertens

aCenter for Kidney Disease, Second Affiliated Hospital of Nanjing Medical University, NanjingbDepartment of Hemodialysis, Yijishan Hospital of Wannan Medical College, WuhucDepartment of Statistics Analysis, Affiliated Drum Tower Hospital, Nanjing University Medical School, NanjingdDepartment of Blood Purification, The Third Affiliated Hospital of Soochow University, ChangzhoueDepartment of Nephrology, Wuxi People's Hospital, Nanjing Medical University, WuxifDepartment of Nephrology, Affiliated Yixing People's Hospital, Jiangsu University, YixinggDepartment of Nephrology, Luan People's Hospital, Luan, China.

Published: June 2017

Objective: Ambulatory arterial stiffness index (AASI) is a parameter derived from ambulatory blood pressure (ABP) readings. It is calculated as 1 minus the linear slope of DBP on SBP. We tested its value in assessing arterial stiffness in dialysis patients.

Methods: We performed a cross-sectional analysis of the baseline data from a cohort study. A total of 344 patients on maintenance hemodialysis from six tertiary hospitals were included. All patients underwent ABP monitoring and carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (cfPWV) measurement. Clinical determinants of AASI were analyzed, and the ability of AASI for assessing arterial stiffness was compared with ambulatory pulse pressure (PP).

Results: Multiple regression analysis revealed that ambulatory PP (β = 0.003), current smoker (β = -0.069), age (β = 0.003) and ambulatory SBP (β = 0.001) were independent determinants of AASI. Ambulatory PP correlates better with cfPWV than AASI (r = 0.28 for AASI and 0.59 for PP; P for difference: <0.001). When cfPWV was treated as a categorical variable, receiver operating characteristic curve analysis also showed a more potent predictive value of PP over AASI (area under the curve: 0.64 for AASI, 0.80 for PP; P for difference: <0.001). Net reclassification improvement and integrated discrimination improvement analysis demonstrated no added predictive value of AASI to PP (net reclassification improvement = -2.2%, P = 0.26; integrated discrimination improvement = 0.001, P = 0.51). Sensitivity analysis in patients with more ABP readings (≥49) yielded similar results.

Conclusion: For dialysis patients, AASI has very limited value in assessing arterial stiffness, whether used alone or added to PP. Our results suggest that this index should not be used as a surrogate marker of arterial stiffness for dialysis patients in future practice and studies.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/HJH.0000000000001309DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

arterial stiffness
20
assessing arterial
12
ambulatory arterial
8
stiffness dialysis
8
determinants aasi
8
ambulatory
7
aasi
6
stiffness
5
stiffness role
4
role assessing
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!