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. 2019 Jun 1;34(6):981-991.
doi: 10.1093/ndt/gfy409.

Treatment and long-term outcome in primary distal renal tubular acidosis

Sergio Camilo Lopez-Garcia  1   2 Francesco Emma  3 Stephen B Walsh  2 Marc Fila  4 Nakysa Hooman  5 Marcin Zaniew  6 Aurélia Bertholet-Thomas  7 Giacomo Colussi  8 Kathrin Burgmaier  9 Elena Levtchenko  10 Jyoti Sharma  11 Jyoti Singhal  11 Neveen A Soliman  12 Gema Ariceta  13 Biswanath Basu  14 Luisa Murer  15 Velibor Tasic  16 Alexey Tsygin  17 Stéphane Decramer  18 Helena Gil-Peña  19 Linda Koster-Kamphuis  20 Claudio La Scola  21 Jutta Gellermann  22 Martin Konrad  23 Marc Lilien  24 Telma Francisco  25 Despoina Tramma  26 Peter Trnka  27   28 Selçuk Yüksel  29 Maria Rosa Caruso  30 Milan Chromek  31 Zelal Ekinci  32 Giovanni Gambaro  33 Jameela A Kari  34 Jens König  23 Francesca Taroni  35 Julia Thumfart  22 Francesco Trepiccione  36 Louise Winding  37 Elke Wühl  38 Ayşe Ağbaş  39 Anna Belkevich  40 Rosa Vargas-Poussou  41 Anne Blanchard  41 Giovanni Conti  42 Olivia Boyer  43 Ismail Dursun  44 Ayşe Seda Pınarbaşı  44 Engin Melek  45 Marius Miglinas  46 Robert Novo  47 Andrew Mallett  28   48 Danko Milosevic  49 Maria Szczepanska  50 Sarah Wente  51 Hae Il Cheong  52 Rajiv Sinha  53 Zoran Gucev  54 Stephanie Dufek  2 Daniela Iancu  2 European dRTA ConsortiumRobert Kleta  1   2 Franz Schaefer  38 Detlef Bockenhauer  1   2
Affiliations

Treatment and long-term outcome in primary distal renal tubular acidosis

Sergio Camilo Lopez-Garcia et al. Nephrol Dial Transplant. .

Abstract

Background: Primary distal renal tubular acidosis (dRTA) is a rare disorder, and we aimed to gather data on treatment and long-term outcome.

Methods: We contacted paediatric and adult nephrologists through European professional organizations. Responding clinicians entered demographic, biochemical, genetic and clinical data in an online form.

Results: Adequate data were collected on 340 patients (29 countries, female 52%). Mutation testing had been performed on 206 patients (61%); pathogenic mutations were identified in 170 patients (83%). The median (range) presentation age was 0.5 (0-54) years and age at last follow-up was 11.0 (0-70.0) years. Adult height was slightly below average with a mean (SD score) of -0.57 (±1.16). There was an increased prevalence of chronic kidney disease (CKD) Stage ≥2 in children (35%) and adults (82%). Nephrocalcinosis was reported in 88%. Nephrolithiasis was more common with SLC4A1 mutations (42% versus 21%). Thirty-six percent had hearing loss, particularly in ATP6V1B1 (88%). The median (interquartile range) prescribed dose of alkali (mEq/kg/day) was 1.9 (1.2-3.3). Adequate metabolic control (normal plasma bicarbonate and normocalciuria) was achieved in 158 patients (51%), more commonly in countries with higher gross domestic product (67% versus 23%), and was associated with higher height and estimated glomerular filtration rate.

Conclusion: Long-term follow-up from this large dRTA cohort shows an overall favourable outcome with normal adult height for most and no patient with CKD Stage 5. However, 82% of adult patients have CKD Stages 2-4. Importance of adequate metabolic control was highlighted by better growth and renal function but was achieved in only half of patients.

Keywords: chronic kidney disease; distal renal tubular acidosis; nephrocalcinosis; nephrolithiasis; sensorineural hearing loss.

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