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Relationship of cardiorenal risk factors with albuminuria based on age, smoking, glycaemic status and BMI: a retrospective cohort study of the UK Biobank data

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posted on 2025-04-16, 14:58 authored by Debasish Kar, Aya El-Wazir, Mintu Nath, Penny Breeze, Karim Jetha, Mark Strong, Jim Chilcott, Melanie Jane Davies, Andrew Lee, Simon de Lusignan, Kamlesh KhuntiKamlesh Khunti, Amanda Adler, Elizabeth Goyder
IntroductionSmoking is harmful, and its cessation is recommended to prevent chronic kidney disease, which often begins with abnormal leakage of albumin in the urine, called albuminuria. Smoking cessation’s effect on albuminuria depends on the pack-years smoked, length of abstinence, body mass index (BMI) and glycosylated haemoglobin (HbA1c). Using the UK Biobank data, we examined the relationship between these cardiorenal variables and albuminuria.MethodsFor this study, we selected a UK Biobank cohort with urinary albumin concentration (UAC) in the first and second visits. Participants were divided into progressor and regressor groups, where progressors were defined as those with increased UAC value, and regressors were those with decreased UAC value. Three different logistic regression models were fitted. In model 1, with a cohort design, we explored the impact of a change in age, HbA1c and BMI between the first and second visits and the UAC. In model 2 and 3, in a cross-sectional design, we explored which cardiorenal risk factors were associated with a rise or fall of UAC at the time point of the second visit. Results are expressed in OR and 95% CI.ResultsThe prevalence of albuminuria was highest in ex-smokers who started smoking between the ages of 13 and 18. With a mean duration of 51 months, there was no statistically significant relationship between smoking status and BMI with albuminuria. Each year of ageing and each unit of increase in HbA1c (mmol/mol) increased the odds of progression of albuminuria by 20% and 3%, respectively. In ex-smokers, at the time point of the second visit, each year of smoking increased, and each year of abstinence decreased the odds by 4% and 6%, respectively.ConclusionSmokers should be supported to stop smoking and remain abstinent despite short-term weight gain. Childhood smoking should be actively discouraged.

History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences Population Health Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

BMJ Public Health

Volume

1

Issue

1

Pagination

e000172 - e000172

Publisher

BMJ

issn

2753-4294

eissn

2753-4294

Copyright date

2023

Available date

2025-04-16

Spatial coverage

England

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Kamlesh Khunti

Deposit date

2025-04-15

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