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A Holistic Approach to Risk for Early Kidney Injury in Indigenous Youth With Type 2 Diabetes: A Proof of Concept Paper From the iCARE Cohort. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Indigenous youth with type 2 diabetes are at a high risk for kidney issues, particularly early onset albuminuria, which can lead to kidney failure at a young age.
  • The iCARE study is investigating the connections between biological factors, mental health, and inflammation to understand their impact on renal health using structural equation modeling.
  • Initial results show that among the first 187 participants, a significant portion had persistent albuminuria, and those affected exhibited higher blood sugar levels, increased hypertension, and longer diabetes duration.

Article Abstract

Background: Indigenous youth with type 2 diabetes (T2D) are disproportionately affected by early onset albuminuria and are at high risk of kidney failure in early adulthood. Traditional biological approaches have failed to fully explain the renal morbidity seen in this population. The mproving renal omplications in dolescents with type 2 diabetes through search cohort (iCARE) study was therefore designed in collaboration with patients, to more holistically evaluate risk factors for renal morbidity. We hypothesize that both biological factors and mental health influence renal outcomes, mediated via inflammatory pathways.

Objective: The objective of this study was to evaluate the iCARE analytic framework which evaluates relationships between biological factors, mental health, inflammation, and albuminuria utilizing a structural equation modeling (SEM) approach.

Methods: The first 187 youth with T2D (10-25 years) from the Manitoba iCARE cohort are presented here to evaluate our theoretical and analytic framework. An SEM was chosen to evaluate the statistical significance of proposed associations. The primary outcome was a nonorthostatic urine albumin:creatinine ratio ≥2 mg/mmol. Main exposures (ie, latent factors) included psychological health (distress, perceived stress, positive mental health and resilience), hypertension (24 hour monitored), and inflammatory markers (C-reactive protein [CRP], erythrocyte sedimentation rate [ESR], fibrinogen). Hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) and duration of diabetes were covariates.

Results: Within the initial cohort (median age = 15 years, duration of diabetes = 2.3 years, 66.8% female), 30.5% (n = 57) had nonorthostatic albuminuria (ALB), and the majority of ALB was persistent (confirmed in 2/3 samples over a 6-month period; n = 47). Youth with ALB had higher HbA1c (10.9% vs 8.9%; < .001), more hypertension (94.2% vs 78·2%; = .02), longer duration of diabetes (3.4 vs 2.4 years; = .01), higher distress (9.2 vs 7.3; = .02), and stress scores (28.7 vs 26.4; = .03), and elevated inflammatory markers (CRP: 4.9 vs 3.1 mg/L; = .01, fibrinogen: 3.7 vs 3.3 µmol/L; = .02). Factors directly associated with ALB in the SEM were hypertension (0.28; = .001), inflammation (0.41; < .001), and HbA1c (0.50; < .001). Psychological health was independently associated with inflammation (-0.20; < .001) but not directly associated with ALB.

Conclusions: Albuminuria is highly prevalent in Indigenous youth with T2D. This preliminary analysis supports a theoretical framework linking glycemic control, hypertension, and inflammation, potentially mediated by psychological factors with albuminuria. These data support the need for more holistic models of evaluation and care for youth with T2D and multifactorial interventions to prevent complications.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6477761PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2054358119838836DOI Listing

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