Albuminuria is associated with increased risk of dementia, independent of eGFR: The SCREAM project
Li Luo, Ron T. Gansevoort, Lyanne M. Kieneker, Yuanhang Yang, Alessandro Bosi, Rudolf A. de Boer, Casper F. M. Franssen, Maria Eriksdotter, Juan‐Jesus Carrero, Hong Xu

TL;DR
High albuminuria is linked to a higher risk of dementia, especially certain types, even after accounting for kidney function.
Contribution
This study demonstrates that albuminuria increases dementia risk independently of estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR).
Findings
ACR levels of 30–299 and ≥300 mg/g were associated with 25% and 37% higher dementia risk, respectively.
Higher ACR levels increased risk for mixed, vascular, and unspecified dementia but not Alzheimer's disease.
Findings were consistent across different albuminuria measurement methods.
Abstract
The association between albuminuria and dementia has been insufficiently studied, possibly due to not considering dementia subtypes, the interplay with estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), and the use of varying albuminuria measurement techniques. This study aimed to investigate the eGFR‐independent risk of all‐cause and type‐specific dementia associated with albuminuria, measured by the urine albumin‐creatinine ratio (ACR) and dipstick. The main analysis included 132,869 subjects aged ≥65 years without a history of dementia and with at least one ACR test from the Stockholm Creatinine Measurements (SCREAM) project between 2006 and 2019. The primary and secondary outcomes were the incidence of all‐cause dementia and type‐specific dementia, respectively. Cox regression models were used to calculate hazard ratios (HRs, 95% CIs). During a median follow‐up of 3.9 (interquartile…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChronic Kidney Disease and Diabetes · Blood Pressure and Hypertension Studies · Dementia and Cognitive Impairment Research
