Hyperkalemia Recurrence and Its Association With Race and Ethnicity in United States Veterans: A Retrospective Cohort Study
Rebecca S Ahdoot, Jui-Ting Hsiung, Abiy Agiro, Yasmin G Brahmbhatt, Kerry Cooper, Souhiela Fawaz, Laura Westfall, Keith C Norris, Kamyar Kalantar-Zadeh, Elani Streja

TL;DR
This study found that Black and Hispanic US veterans are at higher risk of recurring high potassium levels (hyperkalemia) compared to White and non-Hispanic veterans.
Contribution
The study identifies race and ethnicity as significant factors in hyperkalemia recurrence risk among veterans.
Findings
19.1% of Black veterans experienced hyperkalemia recurrence compared to 15.1% of White veterans.
Hispanic veterans had a 18.1% recurrence rate versus 15.6% for non-Hispanic veterans.
Adjusted models showed higher risk in Black and Hispanic groups compared to White and non-Hispanic groups.
Abstract
Introduction: Information on whether race and ethnicity are associated with a greater risk of recurrent hyperkalemia is limited. The aim of this study was to examine the association between race or ethnicity and recurrent hyperkalemia in a population of US veterans. Methods: This retrospective study used the US Veterans Affairs database to identify adults (aged ≥18 years) with at least one serum potassium measurement during the study period who ever experienced hyperkalemia (serum potassium > 5.0 mmol/L). The proportion of patients with hyperkalemia recurrence (≥1 subsequent event) within one year was determined for different race and ethnicity groups. The association between patient race and ethnicity and the risk of hyperkalemia recurrence within one year after the index hyperkalemia event was analyzed using competing risk regression. Results: Among a total of 1,493,539 veterans…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPotassium and Related Disorders · Electrolyte and hormonal disorders · Magnesium in Health and Disease
