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Diabetes Care, Vol 19, Issue 2 171-174, Copyright © 1996 by American Diabetes Association
Five-year prospective study of glomerular filtration rate and albumin excretion rate in normofiltering and hyperfiltering normoalbuminuric NIDDM patients
SP Silveiro, R Friedman, MJ de Azevedo, LH Canani and JL Gross
Endocrinology Division, Hospital de Clinicas de Porto Alegre, Brazil.
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the evolution of glomerular filtration rate (GFR)
and albumin excretion rate (AER) of normofiltering (NF) and hyperfiltering
(HF) normoalbuminuric NIDDM patients. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: A
longitudinal study of 32 normoalbuminuric (AER < 20 micrograms/min)
NIDDM patients and 20 age-, sex-, and BMI-matched normal individuals was
done. Subjects had their GFR (51Cr-labeled EDTA single-injection method)
measured at entry and after 40 and 60 months. At entry, 13 NIDDM patients
had GFR values above the upper limit of the normal range in our laboratory
(> 137 ml.min-1 x 1.73 m-2) and were considered as HF. In NIDDM
patients, the 24-h AER (radioimmunoassay), HbA1c, urinary urea, and mean
arterial blood pressure (MBP) were analyzed at entry and after 40 and 60
months. RESULTS: There was a significant decline of GFR in NIDDM patients
and normal subjects at 60 months. The decline was significantly greater in
HF patients (-0.61 ml.min-1.month-1; P = 0.001) than in NF (-0, 18) and
control subjects (-0, 14); the rate of change in NF and control subjects
was the same (P > 0.05). In stepwise multiple regression analysis, with
GFR decline as the dependent variable and GFR and AER at baseline, age and
change in MBP, change in urinary urea, change in HbA1c, and change in
therapy as independent variables, only baseline GFR (R2 = 0.19, P = 0.002)
and age (R2 = 0.31, P = 0.048) were significantly related to the outcome.
At 60 months, AER raised > 20 micrograms/min in three HF and in four NF
patients. In logistic regression analysis, only higher initial AER
(although still in the normal range; P = 0.037) and an increase in urinary
urea (P = 0.021) were significantly related to the later development of
microalbuminuria. CONCLUSIONS: The GFR of normoalbuminuric NIDDM patients
declines significantly over 60 months. This decline is associated to
baseline GFR and age. HF NIDDM patients show a faster decline in GFR than
NF patients, whose GFR falls at a rate that is compatible with the
age-related change observed in normal control subjects. The development of
microalbuminuria is related to higher baseline AER and to increases in
urinary urea and is similar in NF (4 of 19) and HF (3 of 13) NIDDM patients
(P > 0.05).

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Copyright © 1996 by the American Diabetes Association.
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