Predictors of long-term renal function after kidney surgery for patients with preoperative chronic kidney disease Journal Article


Authors: Silagy, A.; Zabor, E.; Mano, R.; DiNatale, R.; Marcon, J.; Kashani, M.; Blum, K.; Reznik, E.; Jaimes, E.; Coleman, J.; Hakimi, A. A.; Russo, P.
Article Title: Predictors of long-term renal function after kidney surgery for patients with preoperative chronic kidney disease
Abstract: Introduction: We evaluated the trajectory of estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) after kidney surgery in patients with kidney cancer and chronic kidney disease (CKD). Methods: We identified 1204 consecutive patients in our institutional database with preoperative CKD undergoing partial or radical nephrectomy from 1998-2016. Postoperative eGFR was tracked, with patients censored when receiving dialysis or kidney transplantation. A multivariable mixed-effects models assessed associations between preoperative baseline patient and tumor characteristics, and longitudinal eGFR. The Kaplan-Meier method and multivariable Cox regression were used to estimate overall survival, cancer-specific survival, and cumulative incidence of dialysis. Results: Preoperatively, 892 (74.1%), 271 (22.5%), and 41 (3.4%) patients had CKD stage 3a, 3b, and 4/5, respectively. There were 55 patients dialyzed and 355 deaths (99 from kidney cancer). Median followup was 8.1 years, with 25 781 postoperative eGFR measurements. Factors associated with decreasing eGFR postoperatively included radical nephrectomy, male gender, older age, increased body mass index (BMI), and cardiovascular risk factors. We observed a significant interaction effect between time from surgery and preoperative CKD stage: the eGFR of stage 3a patients improved, while stage ≥3b declined (p<0.001). The two-year and five-year cumulative incidence of dialysis was 1.8% (1.1-2.6%) and 3.1% (2.2-4.2%), respectively. The cumulative incidence of dialysis, with death as a competing event, significantly differed by preoperative CKD stage. Conclusions: Preoperative CKD stage ≥3b is independently associated with a higher risk of declining renal function, dialysis, and mortality. With careful selection, patients with preoperative CKD withstand kidney surgery with low rates of dialysis. © 2020 Canadian Urological Association.
Keywords: adult; controlled study; aged; cancer surgery; major clinical study; overall survival; postoperative period; patient selection; cancer patient; cancer staging; follow up; disease association; cohort analysis; retrospective study; body mass; partial nephrectomy; radical nephrectomy; kidney surgery; cancer specific survival; cardiovascular risk; comorbidity; long term care; kidney cancer; theoretical model; chronic kidney failure; kidney transplantation; surgical patient; secondary analysis; tobacco use; renal replacement therapy; estimated glomerular filtration rate; human; male; female; article; preoperative complication
Journal Title: CUAJ-Canadian Urological Association Journal
Volume: 15
Issue: 2
ISSN: 1911-6470
Publisher: Canadian Urological Association  
Date Published: 2020-02-01
Start Page: E103
End Page: E109
Language: English
DOI: 10.5489/cuaj.6485
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 32744993
PMCID: PMC7864699
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 1 October 2020 -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Jonathan Coleman
    343 Coleman
  2. Paul Russo
    581 Russo
  3. Emily Craig Zabor
    172 Zabor
  4. Abraham Ari Hakimi
    324 Hakimi
  5. Roy Mano
    52 Mano
  6. Eduard Reznik
    103 Reznik
  7. Edgar Alberto Jaimes
    81 Jaimes
  8. Mahyar   Kashan
    14 Kashan
  9. Kyle Blum
    38 Blum
  10. Andrew William Silagy
    33 Silagy
  11. Julian Marcon
    19 Marcon