Abstract

Hypoalbuminemia and hyperphosphatemia have been shown to be strong predictors of mortality in dialysis patients that might not be independent from each other. We prospectively investigated the relationship and interaction between serum albumin and phosphorus with all-cause mortality in an inception cohort of incident dialysis patients. We followed 235 incident dialysis patients in a prospective single-center cohort study (INVOR study) applying a time-dependent Cox proportional hazards model using all measured laboratory values (2887 albumin and 10306 phosphorus values). Eighty-two patients (35%) died during a median follow-up of 35.1 months. Albumin was inversely associated with mortality (hazard ratio [95% confidence interval]: 0.23 [0.14 to 0.36]; P < 0.001), whereas higher phosphorus concentrations showed a trend to an increasing risk for mortality (hazard ratio 1.57 [95% confidence interval 0.97 to 2.54]; P = 0.07). Importantly, we observed a significant interaction between albumin and phosphorus (P = 0.01). The lowest risk was found with concurrent low phosphorus and high albumin values, whereas risk was increased with either concurrent low phosphorus and low albumin values or high phosphorus and high albumin values. In incident dialysis patients the associations of serum phosphorus and albumin concentrations with mortality are modified by each other over time. Phosphorus-lowering interventions that concomitantly can cause a fall in serum albumin level may be harmful and warrant additional studies. If confirmed, epidemiologic studies and therapeutic guidelines aiming for target values should consider this interplay.

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