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. 2024 Jan:123:110703.
doi: 10.1016/j.clinbiochem.2023.110703. Epub 2023 Dec 12.

A systematic review of metabolomic findings in adult and pediatric renal disease

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A systematic review of metabolomic findings in adult and pediatric renal disease

Lennart Moritz et al. Clin Biochem. 2024 Jan.

Abstract

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) affects over 0.5 billion people worldwide across their lifetimes. Despite a growingly ageing world population, an increase in all-age prevalence of kidney disease persists. Adult-onset forms of kidney disease often result from lifestyle-modifiable metabolic illnesses such as type 2 diabetes. Pediatric and adolescent forms of renal disease are primarily caused by morphological abnormalities of the kidney, as well as immunological, infectious and inherited metabolic disorders. Alterations in energy metabolism are observed in CKD of varying causes, albeit the molecular mechanisms underlying pathology are unclear. A systematic indexing of metabolites identified in plasma and urine of patients with kidney disease alongside disease enrichment analysis uncovered inborn errors of metabolism as a framework that links features of adult and pediatric kidney disease. The relationship of genetics and metabolism in kidney disease could be classified into three distinct landscapes: (i) Normal genotypes that develop renal damage because of lifestyle and / or comorbidities; (ii) Heterozygous genetic variants and polymorphisms that result in unique metabotypes that may predispose to the development of kidney disease via synergistic heterozygosity, and (iii) Homozygous genetic variants that cause renal impairment by perturbing metabolism, as found in children with monogenic inborn errors of metabolism. Interest in the identification of early biomarkers of onset and progression of CKD has grown steadily in the last years, though it has not translated into clinical routine yet. This systematic review indexes findings of differential concentration of metabolites and energy pathway dysregulation in kidney disease and appraises their potential use as biomarkers.

Keywords: CKD; Chronic kidney disease; Inborn error of metabolism; Metabolomics; Pediatric.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

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