Kidney damage and associated risk factors in rural and urban sub-Saharan Africa (AWI-Gen): a cross-sectional population study

Nov 12, 2019The Lancet. Global health

Kidney damage and related risk factors in rural and urban areas of sub-Saharan Africa

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Abstract

Among 8,110 analysable participants, the age-standardised prevalence of chronic kidney disease was 10.7%.

  • Low estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) was found in 2.4% of participants, while 9.2% exhibited albuminuria.
  • Prevalence of chronic kidney disease was higher in South African sites (14.0% in Agincourt) compared to West African sites (6.6% in Nanoro).
  • Women showed a higher prevalence of chronic kidney disease (12.0%) and low eGFR (3.0%) compared to men (9.5% and 1.7%, respectively).
  • Risk factors associated with kidney damage included older age, hypertension, diabetes, and HIV, while male sex was associated with lower risk.

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