International differences in dialysis mortality reflect background general population atherosclerotic cardiovascular mortality
Date
2006Author
de Charro, Frank T.
Yoshino, Maki
Kuhlmann, Martin K.
Kotanko, Peter
Greenwood, Roger N.
Pisoni, Ronald L.
Port, Friedrich K.
Jager, Kitty J.
Homel, Peter
Augustijn, Hans
Collart, Frederic
Erek, Ekrem
Finne, Patrik
Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo
Gronhagen-Riska, Carola
Ioannidis, George A.
Ivis, Frank
Leivestad, Torbjorn
Lokkegaard, Hans
Lopot, Frantisek
Jin, Dong-Chan
Kramar, Reinhard
Nakao, Toshiyuki
Nandakumar, Mooppil
Ramirez, Sylvia
van der Sande, Frank M.
Schon, Staffan
Simpson, Keith
Walker, Rowan G.
Zaluska, Wopech
Levin, Nathan W.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Existing national, racial, and ethnic differences in dialysis patient mortality rates largely are unexplained. This study aimed to test the hypothesis that mortality rates related to atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) in dialysis populations (DP) and in the background general populations (GP) are correlated. In a cross-sectional, multinational study, all-cause and ASCVD mortality rates were compared between GP and DP using the most recent data from the World Health Organization mortality database (67 countries; 1,571,852,000 population) and from national renal registries (26 countries, 623,900 population). Across GP of 67 countries (14,082,146 deaths), all-cause mortality rates (median 8.88 per 1000 population; range 1.93 to 15.40) were strongly related to ASCVD mortality rates (median 3.21, range 0.53 to 8.69), with Eastern European countries clustering in the upper and Southeast and East Asian countries in the lower rate ranges. Across DP (103,432 deaths), mortality rates from all causes (median 166.20; range 54.47 to 268.80) and from ASCVD (median 63.39 per 1000 population; range 21.52 to 162.40) were higher and strongly correlated. ASCVD mortality rates in DP and in the GP were significantly correlated; the relationship became even stronger after adjustment for age (R-2 = 0.56, P < 0.0001). A substantial portion of the variability in mortality rates that were observed across DP worldwide is attributable to the variability in background ASCVD mortality rates in the respective GP. Genetic and environmental factors may underlie these differences.
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