People with moderate to severe psoriasis are at
increased risk for chronic kidney disease and need to be closely
monitored for kidney problems, a large new study suggests.
Researchers in Philadelphia analyzed data from
nearly 144,000 people, aged 19 to 90, with psoriasis, and a comparison
(control) group of nearly 690,000 adults without the condition.
During seven years of follow-up, people with
psoriasis were more likely to develop chronic kidney disease than those
in the control group. Those with severe psoriasis had a nearly two-fold
higher risk of developing kidney disease and a more than fourfold higher
risk of developing kidney failure requiring dialysis, according to a
journal news release
Further investigation that focused on the amount of
skin area affected by psoriasis showed that people with moderate to
severe psoriasis were at greater risk of developing chronic kidney
disease. People with moderate psoriasis have 3 percent to 10 percent of
skin area affected, while those with severe psoriasis have more than 10
percent of skin area affected.
Psoriasis is a chronic condition involving scaly
skin patches that can lead to itching, cracking and bleeding. As many as
7.5 million Americans have the autoimmune condition, according to the
National Psoriasis Foundation.
Moderate and severe psoriasis affect more than 20
percent of patients worldwide, according to the study, which appears
Oct. 15 in the journal BMJ.
Although the study found an association between
having psoriasis and a higher risk of kidney problems, it did not
establish a cause-and-effect relationship.
The researchers also found that the risk of chronic
kidney disease linked to psoriasis increases with age. In patients aged
40 to 50 with severe disease, psoriasis accounted for one extra case of
chronic kidney disease per 134 patients yearly. In those aged 50 to 60,
it accounted for one extra case yearly per 62 patients.
Further research is needed to confirm the study
findings, determine how psoriasis can cause kidney disease and examine
how psoriasis treatment affects the risk for kidney disease, the
researchers concluded.
Source: Health Day News
No comments:
Post a Comment