AI Article Synopsis

  • Hypercholesterolemia in nephrotic syndrome (NS) patients can increase the risk of heart disease and affect kidney function; this study assessed the effectiveness of statins in NS patients under immunosuppression with specific health outcomes as endpoints.
  • Out of 154 evaluated NS patients over 24 months, most were on statins, with a high percentage achieving remission but no significant difference in kidney survival or major cardiovascular events based on statin use.
  • While statins didn’t improve overall remission or lower major cardiovascular and end-stage kidney disease risks, they showed a potential benefit in reducing venous thromboembolism (VTE) risk, warranting further research to clarify their role in managing nephrotic syndrome.

Article Abstract

: Hypercholesterolemia in patients with nephrotic syndrome (NS) may predispose to cardiovascular events and alter kidney function. We aimed to evaluate statins efficiency in NS patients under immunosuppression using four endpoints: remission rate (RR), end-stage kidney disease (ESKD), major cardiovascular events (MACE), and thrombotic complications (VTE). : We retrospectively examined the outcome at 24 months after diagnosis of 154 NS patients (age 53 (39-64) years, 64% male, estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) 61.9 (45.2-81.0) mL/min). During the follow-up, the lipid profile was evaluated at 6 months and at 1 and 2 years. : The median cholesterol level was 319 mg/dL, and 83% of the patients received statins. Patients without statins (17%) had similar age, body mass index, comorbidities, blood lipids levels, NS severity, and kidney function. The most used statin was simvastatin (41%), followed by rosuvastatin (32%) and atorvastatin (27%). Overall, 79% of the patients reached a form of remission, 5% reached ESKD, 8% suffered MACE, and 11% had VTE. The mean time to VTE was longer in the statin group (22.6 (95%CI 21.7, 23.6) versus 20.0 (95%CI 16.5, 23.5) months, 0.02). In multivariate analysis, statin therapy was not associated with better RR, kidney survival, or fewer MACE; however, the rate of VTE was lower in patients on statins (HR 2.83 (95%CI 1.02, 7.84)). : Statins did not improve the remission rate and did not reduce the risk of MACE or ESKD in non-diabetic nephrotic patients. However, statins seemed to reduce the risk of VTE. Further randomized controlled studies are needed to establish statins' role in NS management.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10054350PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/medicina59030512DOI Listing

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