医学
蛋白尿
肾脏疾病
指南
肾功能
重症监护医学
糖尿病
风险评估
人口
内科学
疾病
风险因素
环境卫生
内分泌学
病理
计算机科学
计算机安全
作者
Alberto Ortíz,Christoph Wanner,Ron T. Gansevoort,Alberto Ortíz,Christoph Wanner,Ron T. Gansevoort,Mario Cozzolino,Danilo Fliser,Giovanni Gambaro,Albert Ong,Alexander R. Rosenkranz,Ivan Rychlík,Pantelis Sarafidis,Roser Torrá,Serhan Tuğlular
标识
DOI:10.1093/eurjpc/zwac186
摘要
Abstract Abstract The European Society of Cardiology 2021 guideline on cardiovascular (CV) disease (CVD) prevention in clinical practice has major implications for both CV risk screening and kidney health of interest to primary care physicians, cardiologists, nephrologists, and other professionals involved in CVD prevention. The proposed CVD prevention strategies require as first step the categorization of individuals into those with established atherosclerotic CVD, diabetes, familiar hypercholesterolaemia, or chronic kidney disease (CKD), i.e. conditions that are already associated with a moderate to very-high CVD risk. This places CKD, defined as decreased kidney function or increased albuminuria as a starting step for CVD risk assessment. Thus, for adequate CVD risk assessment, patients with diabetes, familiar hypercholesterolaemia, or CKD should be identified by an initial laboratory assessment that requires not only serum to assess glucose, cholesterol, and creatinine to estimate the glomerular filtration rate, but also urine to assess albuminuria. The addition of albuminuria as an entry-level step in CVD risk assessment should change clinical practice as it differs from the current healthcare situation in which albuminuria is only assessed in persons already considered to be at high risk of CVD. A diagnosis of moderate of severe CKD requires a specific set of interventions to prevent CVD. Further research should address the optimal method for CV risk assessment that includes CKD assessment in the general population, i.e. whether this should remain opportunistic screening or whether systematic screening.
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