Elevation of Trimethylamine-N-Oxide in Chronic Kidney Disease: Contribution of Decreased Glomerular Filtration Rate

Nov 6, 2019Toxins

Higher Trimethylamine-N-Oxide Levels in Chronic Kidney Disease Linked to Reduced Kidney Filtering

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Abstract

Plasma levels are inversely correlated with (mGFR) in Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) patients.

  • Elevated plasma TMAO levels are observed in CKD, indicating impaired renal function.
  • TMAO clearances are similar to mGFR, suggesting that TMAO is primarily excreted through glomerular filtration.
  • The mean fractional excretion of TMAO is 105% ± 32%, indicating complete renal excretion by filtration with minimal tubular involvement.
  • TMAO is effectively removed during hemodiafiltration, with a higher reduction rate compared to urea (84.9% ± 6.5% vs. 79.2% ± 5.7%).
  • Findings support a strong association between plasma TMAO levels and declining mGFR in CKD.

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Key numbers

28×
Increase in Concentration
Median increase in concentration in hemodialysis patients vs. controls.
105% ± 32%
Fractional Excretion
Mean fractional excretion of across all CKD stages.
84.9% ± 6.5%
Reduction in Hemodialysis
Fractional reduction of levels post-hemodialysis compared to urea.

Full Text

What this is

  • This research investigates the relationship between () levels and kidney function in chronic kidney disease (CKD).
  • The study measures plasma concentrations of and its precursors across various CKD stages, focusing on renal clearance mechanisms.
  • Findings reveal a strong correlation between elevated levels and decreased (), indicating impaired renal function.

Essence

  • levels increase in CKD primarily due to reduced renal clearance. The study shows that is largely excreted through glomerular filtration with minimal tubular involvement.

Key takeaways

  • plasma concentration rises significantly in CKD patients, particularly in those with < 60 mL/min. Median concentrations increase by 3× in CKD stages 3a–3b, 7× in stages 4–5, and 28× in hemodialysis patients compared to controls.
  • clearance closely matches , with a mean fractional excretion of 105% across CKD stages, suggesting that renal excretion is primarily through glomerular filtration.
  • Hemodialysis effectively reduces levels by 84.9% ± 6.5%, which is a greater reduction than that of urea (79.2% ± 5.7%), indicating a unique removal mechanism for in dialysis patients.

Caveats

  • The study's cross-sectional design limits causal inference regarding accumulation and CKD progression. Further longitudinal studies are needed to clarify these relationships.
  • The lack of standardized dietary controls may introduce variability in precursor intake, potentially affecting plasma levels.

Definitions

  • Trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO): A small amine compound produced from dietary precursors by gut microbiota, associated with cardiovascular risk.
  • Glomerular filtration rate (mGFR): A measure of kidney function indicating the rate at which blood is filtered through the kidneys.

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