Abstract

Studies on the association of dysnatraemia with all-cause mortality risk in chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients have yielded inconsistent results. This meta-analysis aimed to evaluate the association of hyponatremia or hypernatremia with all-cause mortality risk in CKD patients. An electronic literature search was performed in Web of Science, Pubmed and Embase databases from inception to March 2017 for available observational studies evaluating the association of dysnatraemia with all-cause mortality risk in CKD patients. Pooled hazard risk (HR) with 95% confidence interval (CI) was calculated for hyponatremia or hypernatremia vs. normonatremia. Seven studies that enrolled 742,979 CKD patients were identified. Baseline hyponatremia (HR 1.34; 95% CI: 1.15–1.57), and not hypernatremia (HR 1.12; 95%: CI 0.93–1.34), was independently associated with increased risk of all-cause mortality, when compared than the normonatremia category. In time-dependent analyses, both time-averaged hyponatremia (HR 1.65; 95% CI: 1.27–2.15) and hypernatremia (HR 1.41; 95% CI: 1.20–1.65) had a higher independent risk of all-cause mortality. Furthermore, subgroup analyses by type of patients, study design, sample size and follow-up duration revealed similar results across most of these analyses. Baseline hyponatremia and time-dependent hyponatremia or hypernatremia were independently associated with increased all-cause mortality risk in CKD patients.

Highlights

  • Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is an increasing global public health concern1

  • Four studies9,11,14,19 were limited to non-dialysis chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients, two studies10,12 enrolled hemodialysis patients, and one study13 included peritoneal dialysis patients

  • The stratified analysis revealed similar results across most of the subgroups, indicating a consistent association between dysnatremia and all-cause mortality (Tables 3 and 4). This is the first meta-analysis that investigated the association of dysnatremia with all-cause mortality risk

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Summary

Introduction

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is an increasing global public health concern. The number of patients with ESRD receiving maintenance hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis continues to increase worldwide. Hyponatremia and hypernatremia are relatively frequent electrolyte abnormalities in patients with advancing stages of CKD, who are undergoing dialysis. Several but not all epidemiologic studies reported that hyponatremia is associated with increased all-cause mortality in no-dialysis CKD and maintenance dialysis patients. To the best of our knowledge, no meta-analysis has addressed the association of baseline and time-dependent dysnatremia with subsequent all-cause mortality risk among CKD patients. Given the conflicting findings in these available studies, we conducted a meta-analysis to investigate whether dysnatremia (hyponatremia and hypernatremia) was an independent predictor of all-cause mortality in CKD patients with or without dialysis

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