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Adverse clinical outcomes associated with short stature at dialysis initiation: a report of the North American Pediatric Renal Transplant Cooperative Study.

2002 May

Journal Article

Authors:
Furth, S.L.; Stablein, D.; Fine, R.N.; Powe, N.R.; Fivush, B.A.

Secondary:
Pediatrics

Volume:
109

Pagination:
909-13

Issue:
5

PMID:
11986455

DOI:
10.1542/peds.109.5.909

Keywords:
Age Factors; Body Height; Child; Child, Preschool; Cohort Studies; Female; Growth Disorders; Humans; Infant; Kidney Failure, Chronic; kidney transplantation; Male; Renal Dialysis; Treatment Outcome

Abstract:
OBJECTIVE: We examined whether height less than the 1% for age (z score <-2.5) at dialysis initiation predicts adverse clinical outcomes for children with kidney failure.DESIGN: National cohort study of children initiating dialysis, followed for a minimum of 1 month to a maximum of 8 years.SETTING: Voluntary consortium of pediatric nephrology centers across the United States and Canada in the North American Pediatric Renal Transplant Cooperative Study.PATIENTS: Two thousand three hundred six patients RESULTS: Although there were no differences in transplant wait listings, school-aged children with short stature were less likely to be attending school full-time than were their counterparts with more normal height, even if medically capable. Short-stature patients have significantly more hospital days per month of dialysis follow-up than those patients with better growth (mean: 1.92 vs 1.58; median: 0.73 vs 0.44 hospital days per month of follow-up). Cox proportional hazards regression analyses show that children with height <1% for age have a twofold higher risk of death than those with more normal height, even after controlling for patient age, race, gender, cause of end-stage renal disease, wait list status, and dialysis modality.CONCLUSIONS: Poor growth during chronic renal insufficiency leading to short stature at dialysis initiation is a marker for a more complicated clinical course for children with kidney failure. Aggressive nutritional support and early referral to a nephrologist to optimize growth may improve long-term outcomes for children with chronic kidney disease.

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