Sex-specific effects of mild kidney dysfunction on vascular function in midlife and older adults.
Journal Article
Overview
abstract
Mild kidney dysfunction (MKD) increases cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk. Vascular dysfunction, including vascular endothelial dysfunction and aortic stiffening, is a key antecedent to CVD, but the impact of MKD on vascular function in midlife/older (ML/O) adults is not established. Moreover, sex is a biological variable that influences vascular function, but whether sex modulates the effects of MKD on vascular function is unclear. Vascular endothelial function (brachial artery flow-mediated dilation, FMDBA) and aortic stiffness (carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity, PWVCF) were compared in 93 ML/O men and postmenopausal women with MKD (estimated glomerular filtration rate [eGFR]: 60-89mL/min/1.73m2) versus 78 ML/O adults without MKD (healthy controls; eGFR: ≥90mL/min/1.73m2) (age: 50+ years). Circulating markers of inflammation and oxidative stress were also assessed. FMDBA was lower in men with MKD (4.0±0.3%) versus healthy controls (5.5±0.5%; P=0.0097) and correlated with eGFR (rs=0.30, P=0.0073). There was no difference in FMDBA between women with MKD (4.7±0.4%) and healthy controls (4.8±0.5%; P=0.86) and no relation with eGFR. PWVCF was higher in men with MKD (9.4±0.2m/s) versus controls (8.4±0.3m/s; P=0.030) and correlated with eGFR (r=-0.34, P=0.0013). However, PWVCF was not different between women with MKD (9.3±0.5m/s) and controls (10.1±0.4m/s; P=0.099) and not related to eGFR. The observed effects of MKD on vascular function were independent of traditional CVD risk factors and medication use. There were no differences in markers of inflammation nor oxidative stress between controls and MKD. Our findings suggest that vascular dysfunction may contribute to increased CVD risk associated with MKD in ML/O men but not postmenopausal women.