Background and Objectives: Plasma protein pentraxin 3 concentrations are elevated in a wide range of diseased states. However, no study has evaluated protein pentraxin 3 in patients with chronic kidney disease.Design, Setting, Participants, & Measurements: Plasma protein pentraxin 3 concentrations were analyzed in relation to GFR, inflammation, cardiovascular disease, and protein-energy wasting in 71 patients with stages 3 to 4 chronic kidney disease, 276 patients with stage 5 chronic kidney disease, and 61 control subjects. Survival (5 yr) in patients with stage 5 chronic kidney disease was analyzed in relation to protein pentraxin 3 levels.Results: Both patient groups with chronic kidney disease had higher protein pentraxin 3 concentrations than control subjects, with the highest concentration in patients with stage 5 chronic kidney disease. In all patients with chronic kidney disease, protein pentraxin 3 correlated negatively with GFR and positively with inflammatory markers. Patients with protein-energy wasting, inflammation, and cardiovascular disease had higher concentrations of protein pentraxin 3 than their counterparts. Patients with high protein pentraxin 3 levels had higher all-cause and cardiovascular mortality. After adjustment for age, gender, C-reactive protein, and cardiovascular disease, all-cause mortality was still significantly higher in patients with high protein pentraxin 3. Finally, protein pentraxin 3 showed a predictive value of mortality similar to that of IL-6 and better than C-reactive protein.Conclusion: Plasma protein pentraxin 3 increases as GFR declines and is associated with the presence of cardiovascular disease and protein-energy wasting. Furthermore, in patients with chronic kidney disease, elevated protein pentraxin 3 predicted all-cause mortality.
Background and objectives: Albuminuria and inflammation predict cardiovascular events. Pentraxin 3, an inflammatory mediator produced by, among others, endothelial cells, may have a role in atherogenesis.Design, setting, participants, & measurements: In 207 Swedish patients with stage 5 chronic kidney disease and 79 Turkish patients with type 2 diabetes and proteinuria and normal renal function, whether serum pentraxin 3 levels are associated with albuminuria and endothelial dysfunction was studied.Results: Patients with stage 5 chronic kidney disease and a high degree of albuminuria more often had diabetes and higher levels of pentraxin 3, vascular cellular adhesion molecule-1, and blood pressure. Moreover, pentraxin 3 was independently associated with 24-h urinary albumin excretion. In patients with type 2 diabetes, pentraxin 3 was significantly higher than in control subjects. Patients with type 2 diabetes and more proteinuria had higher pentraxin 3, C-reactive protein, glycosylated hemoglobin, insulin, and homeostasis model assessment index as well as lower flow-mediated dilation and serum albumin. Pentraxin 3 was positively correlated with C-reactive protein, homeostasis model assessment index, and carotid intima-media thickness and negatively with flow-mediated dilation. Pentraxin 3 and glomerular filtration rate were independently associated with 24-h urinary protein excretion. Only pentraxin 3 and proteinuria were significantly and independently associated with flow-mediated dilation.Conclusions: In two different renal cohorts, one of stage 5 chronic kidney disease and one of type 2 diabetes and normal renal function, pentraxin 3 was independently associated with proteinuria. Moreover, both pentraxin 3 and proteinuria were associated with endothelial dysfunction in patients with type 2 diabetes.
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