Cardiovascular complications are the most important cause of death in patients on dialysis with end-stage renal disease. Antibodies reacting with Β-glycoprotein I seem to play a pathogenic role in antiphospholipid syndrome and stroke and are involved in the origin of atherosclerosis. Here we evaluated the presence of anticardiolipin and anti-Β-glycoprotein I antibodies together with other vascular risk factors and their relationship with mortality and cardiovascular morbidity in a cohort of 124 hemodialysis patients prospectively followed for 2 years. Of these, 41 patients were significantly positive for IgA anti-Β-glycoprotein I, and the remaining had normal values. At 24 months, overall and cardiovascular mortality and thrombotic events were all significantly higher in patients with high anti-Β-glycoprotein I antibodies. Multivariate analysis using Cox regression modeling found that age, hypoalbuminemia, use of dialysis catheters, and IgA Β-glycoprotein I antibodies were independent risk factors for death. Thus, IgA antibodies to Β-glycoprotein I are detrimental to the clinical outcome of hemodialysis patients. © 2012 International Society of Nephrology.
CITATION STYLE
Serrano, A., García, F., Serrano, M., Ramírez, E., Alfaro, F. J., Lora, D., … Morales, J. M. (2012). IgA antibodies against Β2 glycoprotein i in hemodialysis patients are an independent risk factor for mortality. Kidney International, 81(12), 1239–1244. https://doi.org/10.1038/ki.2011.477
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