Lymphoma survivors have an increased long-term risk of chronic kidney disease.

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Citation: Leukemia & Lymphoma. :1-8, 2020 Jul 11PMID: 32654590Institution: MedStar Heart & Vascular Institute | MedStar Washington Hospital Center | Washington Cancer InstituteDepartment: Medicine/Internal Medicine | Medicine/NephrologyForm of publication: Journal ArticleMedline article type(s): Journal ArticleSubject headings: IN PROCESS -- NOT YET INDEXEDYear: 2020ISSN:
  • 1026-8022
Name of journal: Leukemia & lymphomaAbstract: With improving lymphoma survival, late effects of therapy have emerged. Here, we describe pattern of long-term chronic kidney disease (CKD) in lymphoma survivors. Demographics, comorbidities, lymphoma histology, treatment, and outcome were recorded. Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) was recorded at diagnosis, 1, 2, 5, and 10 years. Rate of GFR decline with time and CKD-free survival were recorded. In 397 patients, median age was 55.3 (18-88), 54% were male, 60% were African Americans, 42% had hypertension (HTN), 15% had DM, 13% had hyperuricemia, 86% received chemotherapy, and 14% had baseline CKD. Total 125 (31%) patients developed CKD in 10 years after lymphoma diagnosis. Probability of CKD development increased significantly with time (23% at 1 year to 41% at 10 years). Rate of GFR decline was 4.6 mL/min/per year. Age, HTN, hyperuricemia, and DM (in young patients) predicted risk of CKD. Thus, lymphoma survivors are at substantial long-term risk of CKD development.All authors: Al-Shbool G, Desai SH, Desale S, Malkovska V, Veis JFiscal year: FY2021Digital Object Identifier: ORCID: Date added to catalog: 2020-09-02
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Journal Article MedStar Authors Catalog Article 32654590 Available 32654590

With improving lymphoma survival, late effects of therapy have emerged. Here, we describe pattern of long-term chronic kidney disease (CKD) in lymphoma survivors. Demographics, comorbidities, lymphoma histology, treatment, and outcome were recorded. Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) was recorded at diagnosis, 1, 2, 5, and 10 years. Rate of GFR decline with time and CKD-free survival were recorded. In 397 patients, median age was 55.3 (18-88), 54% were male, 60% were African Americans, 42% had hypertension (HTN), 15% had DM, 13% had hyperuricemia, 86% received chemotherapy, and 14% had baseline CKD. Total 125 (31%) patients developed CKD in 10 years after lymphoma diagnosis. Probability of CKD development increased significantly with time (23% at 1 year to 41% at 10 years). Rate of GFR decline was 4.6 mL/min/per year. Age, HTN, hyperuricemia, and DM (in young patients) predicted risk of CKD. Thus, lymphoma survivors are at substantial long-term risk of CKD development.

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