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Dialysis
Patients residing at higher altitude have
lower rate of death
Newswise — Compared to dialysis patients living near sea
level, dialysis patients living at an
altitude higher than 4,000 feet have a 12-15
percent lower rate of death, according to a
study in the February 4 issue of JAMA.
A recent study found that patients with end-stage renal
(kidney) disease (ESRD) living at higher
altitude achieved greater hemoglobin
concentrations (a protein in red blood cells
that primarily transports oxygen from the
lungs to the rest of the body) while
receiving lower doses of erythropoietin (a
hormone that stimulates the production of
red blood cells).
Increased iron availability caused by activation of
hypoxia-induced (oxygen deficiency) factors
at higher altitude may explain this finding,
according to background information in the
article.
Wolfgang C. Winkelmayer, M.D., Sc.D., of
Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard
Medical School, Boston, and colleagues
examined whether increased altitude would be
associated with a reduced rate of death for
patients initiating chronic dialysis.
Using
a comprehensive dialysis registry, the
researchers identified 804,812 patients with ESRD who initiated dialysis between 1995 and
2004 and who met the study entry
requirements.
Most patients resided below an
altitude of 250 ft. (40.5 percent) or
between 250-1,999 ft. (54.4 percent).
Only
1.9 percent of incident dialysis patients
lived between 4,000 and 5,999 ft. and 0.4
percent higher than 6,000 ft. Patients were
stratified by the average elevation of their
residential zip code.
Compared with patients living at lower altitudes (less than
250 ft.), the rate of death was reduced for
patients living from 250-1,999 ft. by 3
percent; from 2,000 through 3,999 ft. by 7
percent; from 4,000 to 5,999 ft. by 12
percent; and higher than 6,000 ft. by 15
percent.
Actuarial 5-year survival was 34.8 percent for patients
living at or near sea level but was 42.7
percent among those living at an altitude
higher than 6,000 ft.; patients in the
highest elevation group experienced a 7.9
percent greater absolute or 22.7 percent
greater relative 5-year survival.
Median
(midpoint) survival after initiation of
dialysis was 3.1 years for those living
lower than 250 ft. but was 4.0 years for
those living at an altitude higher than
6,000 ft., for a difference in median
survival of 0.9 years between these 2
groups.
While a decrease in age- and sex-standardized mortality at
higher altitude was also observed in the
general population, the magnitude of the
risk reduction was half of that observed in
the ESRD population.
“In conclusion, we found a graded reduction in mortality
from any cause in ESRD patients residing at
greater altitude, a finding that was not
explained by differences in observed patient
characteristics.
"The magnitude of this
observation was markedly greater than the
observed small reduction in mortality at
higher altitude in the general population.
We propose that hypoxia-inducible factors
are persistent at high altitude in patients
with ESRD and may confer protective
effects,” the authors write.
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