Impact of Vitamin D on Proteinuria, Insulin Resistance, and Cardiovascular Parameters in Kidney Transplant Recipients
Transplantation Proceedings, 01/03/2012
Lee DR et al. – Vitamin D insufficiency was common and significantly associated with proteinuria among kidney transplant recipients. Additional studies are needed to clarify the causal relationship of vitamin D insufficiency with proteinuria and to determine the role of vitamin D supplementation to attenuate the development of proteinuria.
Methods- Low vitamin D levels prevalent in patients with chronic kidney disease have been reported to be associated with proteinuria, insulin resistance, and cardiovascular disease.
- Kidney transplant recipients are also susceptible to low vitamin D levels but their clinical significance is uncertain.
- This study investigated the prevalence and association of vitamin D insufficiency with proteinuria, insulin resistance, and cardiovascular parameters among 95 living donor kidney transplant recipients.
- Levels of 25–hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] were stratified into an insufficient group [25(OH)D ≤ 30 ng/mL; n = 19] versus a normal group [25(OH)D > 30 ng/mL; n = 76].
- Proteinuria (urinary protein–creatinine [P/C] ≥ 0.2 mg/mg), insulin resistance (homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance [HOMA–IR]) and cardiovascular parameters were compared between groups.
- Twenty percent of subjects showed vitamin D insufficiency.
- Proteinuria was higher among the vitamin D insufficient than the normal group (47.4% vs 18.7%; P = .02).
- 25(OH)D levels inversely correlated with urinary P/C ratio and intact parathyroid hormone (I–PTH) levels (r = –.24, P = .02 and r = –.23, P = .02, respectively).
- No correlations were observed between 25(OH)D levels and HOMA–IR scores or cardiovascular parameters.
- On univariate analysis, proteinuria and i–PTH levels were independent predictors of vitamin D insufficiency (P < .01 and P = .03, respectively).
- Multivariate analysis demonstrated proteinuria to be a significant predictor of vitamin D insufficiency (odds ratio = 4.526; P = .03).






