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Review
. 2023 Apr 1;44(13):1112-1123.
doi: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehac683.

Prevention of cardiorenal damage: importance of albuminuria

Affiliations
Review

Prevention of cardiorenal damage: importance of albuminuria

Luis M Ruilope et al. Eur Heart J. .

Abstract

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is projected to become a leading global cause of death by 2040, and its early detection is critical for effective and timely management. The current definition of CKD identifies only advanced stages, when kidney injury has already destroyed >50% of functioning kidney mass as reflected by an estimated glomerular filtration rate <60 mL/min/1.73 m2 or a urinary albumin/creatinine ratio >six-fold higher than physiological levels (i.e. > 30 mg/g). An elevated urinary albumin-excretion rate is a known early predictor of future cardiovascular events. There is thus a 'blind spot' in the detection of CKD, when kidney injury is present but is undetectable by current diagnostic criteria, and no intervention is made before renal and cardiovascular damage occurs. The present review discusses the CKD 'blind spot' concept and how it may facilitate a holistic approach to CKD and cardiovascular disease prevention and implement the call for albuminuria screening implicit in current guidelines. Cardiorenal risk associated with albuminuria in the high-normal range, novel genetic and biochemical markers of elevated cardiorenal risk, and the role of heart and kidney protective drugs evaluated in recent clinical trials are also discussed. As albuminuria is a major risk factor for cardiovascular and renal disease, starting from levels not yet considered in the definition of CKD, the implementation of opportunistic or systematic albuminuria screening and therapy, possibly complemented with novel early biomarkers, has the potential to improve cardiorenal outcomes and mitigate the dismal 2040 projections for CKD and related cardiovascular burden.

Keywords: Albuminuria; CKD blind spot; Cardiorenal disease; Cardiovascular disease; Chronic kidney disease.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of interest: L.M.R. reports consulting fees from Bayer AG. A.O. reports consulting fees from Sanofi and consultancy or speaker fees or travel support from Advicciene, Astellas, Astrazeneca, Amicus, Amgen, Fresenius Medical Care, GSK, Bayer, Sanofi-Genzyme, Menarini, Kyowa Kirin, Alexion, Idorsia, Chiesi, Otsuka, Novo-Nordisk, and Vifor Fresenius Medical Care Renal Pharma and is Director of the Catedra Mundipharma-UAM of diabetic kidney disease and the Catedra Astrazeneca-UAM of chronic kidney disease and electrolytes and is member of Council ERA and SOMANE. M.V. reports consulting fees from Menarini International, Servier, Novo-Nordisk, Astra Zeneca, advisory boards from Kalos Medical, Sanofi Pasteur, and is member of Italian Society of Cardiovascular Prevention and Italian Society of Hypertension. B.P. reports consulting fees from Bayer, Astra Zeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Vifor, KBP Bioscienes, Sarfez, SCPharmaceuticals, SQinnovations, G-3 Pharmaceuticals, Phasebio, Lexicon, Cereno Scientific, Protonintel, and advisory boards from Mineralys. The rest of the authors declare that there is no conflict of interest.

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