Introduction: Components of the metabolic syndrome are highly prevalent in chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients--some of which paradoxically appear to predict an improved outcome in this population. We hypothesized that the circulating calcification inhibitor fetuin-A/AHSG, which is also a natural inhibitor of the tyrosine kinase insulin receptor, could be one factor explaining the association between increased fat mass and a survival advantage in CKD and thus conducted an explorational study to provide preliminary data to support further research into this hypothesis.
Patients and methods: In a cross-sectional study, we evaluated 198 CKD stage 5 patients (GFR 6.8 +/- 0.2 ml/min; 62% males, mean age 52 +/- 1 years) close to the start of renal replacement therapy. We studied circulating AHSG (ELISA) and two common functional AHSG gene polymorphisms (at amino acids Thr248Met (C-T) and Thr256Ser (C-G) using Pyrosequencing) and related these to multiple components of the metabolic syndrome.
Results: Median circulating AHSG was lower (p < 0.01) in type-2 (0.22 g/l) and type-1 (0.16 g/l) diabetics as compared to non-diabetic CKD-5 patients (0.24 g/l). AHSG correlated with both total and truncal fat mass in type-2 diabetics (rho 0.37 and 0.39; p < 0.001, respectively), but not in type-1 diabetics or non-diabetics. Both SNPs significantly influenced circulating levels of AHSG, and were also associated with significant differences in serum triglycerides and HDL cholesterol. Furthermore, there were significant differences in the prevalence of metabolic syndrome criteria between the AHSG Thr256Ser (C-G) genotype groups, with a more atherogenic lipid profile in AHSG high producers (Thr/Thr homozygotes). In multivariate analysis, the association between circulating AHSG and fat mass remained significant also after adjustment for age, gender, inflammation (CRP >10 mg/l), and AHSG genotype.
Conclusions: The present, explorational, study supports further, mechanistic, studies into a physiological link between AHSG and body fat mass in patients with CKD. As we observed an association between higher fat mass and elevated AHSG levels, these preliminary results may form the basis of further study to establish if the observed associations may be one reason why obesity has been reported to constitute a survival advantage in CKD.
Copyright 2008 S. Karger AG, Basel.