Towards an epidemiologic definition of renal disease: Rates and associations of albuminuria in a high‐risk Australian Aboriginal community
Open Access
- 1 September 1998
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Nephrology
- Vol. 4 (s2) , S59-S65
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1440-1797.1998.tb00474.x
Abstract
Summary: An epidemic of renal failure is accompanying the rising rates of hypertension, type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease among Aborigines in the Northern Territory of Australia. the rates and associations of the underlying renal disease were studied in a remote Aboriginal community whose renal failure rates are among the highest reported in the world. More than 90% of school‐age children and adults participated in a health screen, in which the urinary albumin/creatinine ratio (ACR) was used as the primary renal disease marker. Albuminuria was evident in early childhood and increased dramatically with age; 26% of adults had microalbuminuria and 24% had overt albuminuria. Most hypertension segregated in persons with albuminuria and all renal failure developed out of a background of overt albuminuria. ACR levels correlated with the presence of scabies at screening, with a history of post‐streptococcal glomerulonephritis, with increasing bodyweight or its surrogates, with increasing blood pressure, glucose, insulin and lipid levels, and with evidence of heavy drinking. ACR also correlated inversely with birthweight. Finally, increasing ACR correlated with an increasing cardiovascular risk factor score. Thus many factors contribute to renal disease in this community; most are the features and consequences of lifestyle change, poverty and disadvantage. Renal disease shares risk factors, including low birthweight, with Syndrome X, which supports the inclusion of renal disease in that syndrome, and explains the excess cardiovascular morbidity in people with chronic renal disease. There is an urgent need for effective programs to modify recognized risk factors, and to identify and treat people with established renal disease to retard the progression of renal insufficiency.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Screening for renal disease and other chronic diseases in Aboriginal adults and preliminary experience of a medical intervention programNephrology, 1998
- A health profile of adults in a Northern Territory Aboriginal community, with an emphasis on preventable morbiditiesAustralian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health, 1997
- MARKERS FOR CARDIOVASCULAR AND RENAL MORBIDITY: EXPECTATIONS FOR AN INTERVENTION PROGRAMME IN AN AUSTRALIAN ABORIGINAL COMMUNITYClinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology, 1996
- Renal disease in the Australian Aboriginal population: A pathological studyNephrology, 1996
- Extracellular matrix, growth factors and their interactions in the pathogenesis of diabetic kidney diseaseNephrology, 1996
- Treatment of Australian Aboriginals with end‐stage renal disease in the top end of the Northern Territory: 1978–93Nephrology, 1995
- Antigenic diversity within a family of M proteins from group A streptococci: evidence for the role of frameshift and compensatory mutationsGene, 1994
- Why Do Aboriginal Newborns Weigh Less? Gestational Age at Delivery: Estimation, Distribution and DeterminantsAustralian and New Zealand Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 1994
- Urinary albumin excretion rate and puberty in non‐diabetic children and adolescentsActa Paediatrica, 1993
- Insulin resistance and compensatory hyperinsulinemia: Role in hypertension, dyslipidemia, and coronary heart diseaseAmerican Heart Journal, 1991