Abstract

Patterns of kidney function decline vary among those with T1D. End-stage kidney disease (ESKD) develops after progressive kidney function decline that begins when kidney function is normal, regardless of albuminuria. We aimed to determine if these findings were observed in the DCCT/EDIC cohort, which enrolled 1,441 individuals and randomly assigned them to intensive insulin therapy (n=711) or conventional insulin therapy (n=730). Baseline mean eGFR and AER were 125 ml/min/1.73m2 and 12 mg/24 hours, respectively. During 27 years of follow-up 129 individuals reached reduced eGFR <60ml/min/1.73m2 or ESKD. For these individuals we applied latent class trajectory analysis minimizing sum of squares of linear spline models with varying knot placement to identify patterns of eGFR decline. We identified two patterns: i) slow decline without eGFR breakpoint (n=56) and ii) fast decline with clear breakpoint (n=73). Slow decliners reached reduced eGFR but rarely ESKD (2%), while many fast decliners progressed to ESKD (35%) within 5-15 years after the breakpoint. Fast decline was less frequent in intensive compared to conventional insulin therapy [26 (3.7%) vs 47 (6.4%), respectively, p=0.022] and had longer median time from enrollment to breakpoint (18 vs 13 years, respectively, p=0.0004). However, the slope of annual loss of eGFR after breakpoint did not differ. In conclusion, we identified a unique phenotype - the “breakpoint” to fast decline in eGFR - as the main predictor of ESKD in T1D. This breakpoint started while eGFR was normal, subsequent decline was linear, and the onset of the breakpoint was substantially delayed by intensive insulin therapy rather than the slope of decline itself. Research on biomarkers that predict the onset of the eGFR ‘breakpoint’ is needed. Disclosure K.Ihara: None. J.K.Skupien: None. E.Satake: None. B.A.Perkins: Advisory Panel; Dexcom, Inc., Insulet Corporation, Novo Nordisk, Sanofi, Vertex Pharmaceuticals Incorporated, Other Relationship; Abbott, Medtronic, Sanofi, Research Support; Novo Nordisk, Bank of Montreal (BMO). A.Krolewski: None.

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