Nonlinear relationship between body mass index and clinical outcomes after kidney transplantation: A dose-response meta-analysis of 50 observational studies
Autor: | Yu Fan, Turun Song, Tao Lin, Saifu Yin, Linyan Wu, Zhongli Huang |
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Rok vydání: | 2022 |
Předmět: |
Graft Rejection
medicine.medical_specialty business.industry Graft Survival Urology Delayed Graft Function Renal function medicine.disease Kidney Transplantation Body Mass Index Transplantation Treatment Outcome Risk Factors Weight loss Diabetes mellitus medicine Humans Surgery Obesity Risk factor Underweight medicine.symptom business Body mass index Kidney transplantation |
Zdroj: | Surgery. 171:1396-1405 |
ISSN: | 0039-6060 |
Popis: | Background Exact dose-response relationship between body mass index at transplantation and clinical outcomes after kidney transplantation remained unclear, and no specific body mass index threshold and pretransplant weight loss aim were recommended for kidney transplantation candidates among transplant centers. Methods PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, and Cochrane Library were searched for literature published up to December 31, 2019. The two-stage, random effect meta-analysis was performed to estimate the dose-response relationship between body mass index and clinical outcomes after kidney transplantation. Results Ninety-four studies were included for qualitative assessment and 50 for dose-response meta-analyses. There was a U-shaped relationship between graft loss, patient death, and body mass index. Body mass index with the lowest risk of graft loss was 25.2 kg/m2, and preferred body mass index range was 22–28 kg/m2. Referring to a body mass index of 22 kg/m2, the risk of graft loss was 1.088, 0.981, 1.003, and 1.685 for a body mass index of 18, 24, 28, and 40 kg/m2, respectively. Body mass index with the lowest risk of patient death was 24.7 kg/m2, and preferred body mass index range was 22–27 kg/m2. Referring to a body mass index of 22 kg/m2, the patient death risk was 1.115, 0.981, 1.032, and 2.634 for a body mass index of 18, 24, 28, and 40 kg/m2, respectively. J-shaped relationships were observed between body mass index and acute rejection, delayed graft function, primary graft nonfunction, and de novo diabetes. Pair-wise comparisons showed that higher body mass index was also a risk factor for cardiovascular diseases, hypertension, infection, longer length of hospital stay, and lower estimated glomerular filtration rate level. Conclusion Underweight and severe obesity at transplantation are associated with a significantly increased risk of graft loss and patient death. A target body mass index at kidney transplantation is 22–27 kg/m2. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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