Jose Luis Gorriz
University of Valencia
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Featured researches published by Jose Luis Gorriz.
Kidney International | 2013
Jorge B. Cannata-Andía; José L. Fernández-Martín; Francesco Locatelli; Gérard M. London; Jose Luis Gorriz; Jürgen Floege; Markus Ketteler; Aníbal Ferreira; Adrian Covic; Bolesław Rutkowski; Dimitrios Memmos; Willem Jan W. Bos; Vladimir Teplan; Judit Nagy; Christian Tielemans; Dierik Verbeelen; David Goldsmith; Reinhard Kramar; Pierre Yves Martin; Rudolf P. Wüthrich; Draško Pavlović; Miha Benedik; José Emilio Sánchez; Pablo Martínez-Camblor; Manuel Naves-Díaz; Juan Jesus Carrero; Carmine Zoccali
Hyperphosphatemia has been associated with higher mortality risk in CKD 5 patients receiving dialysis. Here, we determined the association between the use of single and combined phosphate-binding agents and survival in 6797 patients of the COSMOS study: a 3-year follow-up, multicenter, open-cohort, observational prospective study carried out in 227 dialysis centers from 20 European countries. Patient phosphate-binding agent prescriptions (time-varying) and the case-mix-adjusted facility percentage of phosphate-binding agent prescriptions (instrumental variable) were used as predictors of the relative all-cause and cardiovascular mortality using Cox proportional hazard regression models. Three different multivariate models that included up to 24 variables were used for adjustments. After multivariate analysis, patients prescribed phosphate-binding agents showed a 29 and 22% lower all-cause and cardiovascular mortality risk, respectively. The survival advantage of phosphate-binding agent prescription remained statistically significant after propensity score matching analysis. A decrease of 8% in the relative risk of mortality was found for every 10% increase in the case-mix-adjusted facility prescription of phosphate-binding agents. All single and combined therapies with phosphate-binding agents, except aluminum salts, showed a beneficial association with survival. The findings made in the present association study need to be confirmed by randomized controlled trials to prove the observed beneficial effect of phosphate-binding agents on mortality.
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2015
José L. Fernández-Martín; Pablo Martínez-Camblor; María P. Dionisi; Jürgen Floege; Markus Ketteler; Gérard M. London; Francesco Locatelli; Jose Luis Gorriz; Bolesław Rutkowski; Aníbal Ferreira; Willem-Jan Bos; Adrian Covic; Minerva Rodríguez-García; José Emilio Sánchez; Diego Rodríguez-Puyol; Jorge B. Cannata-Andía
BACKGROUNDnAbnormalities in serum phosphorus, calcium and parathyroid hormone (PTH) have been associated with poor survival in haemodialysis patients. This COSMOS (Current management Of Secondary hyperparathyroidism: a Multicentre Observational Study) analysis assesses the association of high and low serum phosphorus, calcium and PTH with a relative risk of mortality. Furthermore, the impact of changes in these parameters on the relative risk of mortality throughout the 3-year follow-up has been investigated.nnnMETHODSnCOSMOS is a 3-year, multicentre, open-cohort, prospective study carried out in 6797 adult chronic haemodialysis patients randomly selected from 20 European countries.nnnRESULTSnUsing Cox proportional hazard regression models and penalized splines analysis, it was found that both high and low serum phosphorus, calcium and PTH were associated with a higher risk of mortality. The serum values associated with the minimum relative risk of mortality were 4.4 mg/dL for serum phosphorus, 8.8 mg/dL for serum calcium and 398 pg/mL for serum PTH. The lowest mortality risk ranges obtained using as base the previous values were 3.6-5.2 mg/dL for serum phosphorus, 7.9-9.5 mg/dL for serum calcium and 168-674 pg/mL for serum PTH. Decreases in serum phosphorus and calcium and increases in serum PTH in patients with baseline values of >5.2 mg/dL (phosphorus), >9.5 mg/dL (calcium) and <168 pg/mL (PTH), respectively, were associated with improved survival.nnnCONCLUSIONSnCOSMOS provides evidence of the association of serum phosphorus, calcium and PTH and mortality, and suggests survival benefits of controlling chronic kidney disease-mineral and bone disorder biochemical parameters in CKD5D patients.
American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 2012
Moniek W.M. van de Luijtgaarden; Marlies Noordzij; Charles R.V. Tomson; Cécile Couchoud; Giovanni Cancarini; David M Ansell; Willem-Jan Bos; Friedo W. Dekker; Jose Luis Gorriz; Christos Iatrou; Liliana Garneata; Christoph Wanner; Svjetlana Čala; Olivera Stojceva-Taneva; Patrik Finne; Vianda S. Stel; Wim Van Biesen; Kitty J. Jager
BACKGROUNDnLittle is known about the criteria nephrologists use in the decision of when to start renal replacement therapy (RRT) in early referred adult patients. We evaluated opinions of European nephrologists on the decision for when to start RRT.nnnSTUDY DESIGNnEuropean web-based survey.nnnPREDICTORSnPatient presentations described as uncomplicated patients, patients with unfavorable clinical and unfavorable social conditions, or patients with specific clinical, social, and logistical factors.nnnSETTING & PARTICIPANTSnNephrologists from 11 European countries.nnnOUTCOMES & MEASUREMENTSnWe studied opinions of European nephrologists about the influence of clinical, social, and logistical factors on decision making regarding when to start RRT, reflecting practices in place in 2009. Questions included target levels of kidney function at the start of RRT and factors accelerating or postponing RRT initiation. Using linear regression, we studied determinants of target estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) at the start of RRT.nnnRESULTSnWe received 433 completed surveys. The median target eGFR selected to start RRT in uncomplicated patients was 10.0 (25th-75th percentile, 8.0-10.0) mL/min/1.73 m(2). Level of excretory kidney function was considered the most important factor in decision making regarding uncomplicated patients (selected by 54% of respondents); in patients with unfavorable clinical versus social conditions, this factor was selected by 24% versus 32%, respectively. Acute clinical factors such as life-threatening hyperkalemia refractory to medical therapy (100%) and uremic pericarditis (98%) elicited a preference for an immediate start, whereas patient preference (69%) and vascular dementia (66%) postponed the start. Higher target eGFRs were reported by respondents from high- versus low-RRT-incidence countries (10.4 [95% CI, 9.9-10.9] vs 9.1 mL/min/1.73 m(2)) and from for-profit versus not-for-profit centers (10.1 [95% CI, 9.5-10.7] vs 9.5 mL/min/1.73 m(2)).nnnLIMITATIONSnWe were unable to calculate the exact response rate and examined opinions rather than practice for 433 nephrologists.nnnCONCLUSIONSnOnly for uncomplicated patients did half the nephrologists consider excretory kidney function as the most important factor. Future studies should assess the weight of each factor affecting decision making.
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2013
José L. Fernández-Martín; Juan Jesus Carrero; Miha Benedik; Willem Jan W. Bos; Adrian Covic; Aníbal Ferreira; Jürgen Floege; David Goldsmith; Jose Luis Gorriz; Markus Ketteler; Reinhard Kramar; Francesco Locatelli; Gérard M. London; Pierre Yves Martin; Dimitrios Memmos; Judit Nagy; Manuel Naves-Díaz; Draško Pavlović; Minerva Rodríguez-García; Bolesław Rutkowski; Vladimir Teplan; Christian Tielemans; Dierik Verbeelen; Rudolf P. Wüthrich; Pablo Martínez-Camblor; Iván Cabezas-Rodríguez; José Emilio Sánchez-Alvarez; Jorge B. Cannata-Andía
BACKGROUNDnChronic kidney disease-mineral and bone disorders (CKD-MBD) are important complications of CKD5D patients that are associated with mortality.nnnMETHODSnCOSMOS is a multicentre, open cohort, prospective, observational 3-year study carried out in haemodialysis patients from 20 European countries during 2005-07. The present article describes the main characteristics of the European dialysis population, the current practice for the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of secondary hyperparathyroidism and the differences across different European regions.nnnRESULTSnThe haemodialysis population in Europe is an aged population (mean age 64.8±14.2 years) with a high prevalence of diabetes (29.5%) and cardiovascular disease (76.0%), and 28.7% of patients have been on haemodialysis more than 5 years. Patients from the former Eastern countries are younger (59.3±14.3 versus 66.0±13.9), having a lower proportion of diabetics (24.1 versus 30.7%). There were relevant differences in the frequency of measurement of the main CKD-MBD biochemical parameters [Ca, P and parathyroid hormone (PTH)] and the Eastern countries showed a poorer control of these biochemical parameters (K/DOQI and K/DIGO targets). Overall, 48.0% of the haemodialysis patients received active vitamin D treatment. Calcitriol use doubled that of alfacalcidiol in the Mediterranean countries, whereas the opposite was found in the non-Mediterranean countries. The criteria followed to perform parathyroidectomy were different across Europe. In the Mediterranean countries, the level of serum PTH considered to perform parathyroidectomy was higher than in non-Mediterranean countries; as a result, in the latter, more parathyroidectomies were performed in the year previous to inclusion to COSMOS.nnnCONCLUSIONSnThe COSMOS baseline results show important differences across Europe in the management of CKD-MBD.
Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2013
Iván Cabezas-Rodríguez; Juan Jesus Carrero; Carmine Zoccali; Abdul Rashid Qureshi; Markus Ketteler; Jürgen Floege; Gérard M. London; Francesco Locatelli; Jose Luis Gorriz; Bolesław Rutkowski; Dimitrios Memmos; Aníbal Ferreira; Adrian Covic; Vladimir Teplan; Willem-Jan Bos; Reinhard Kramar; Draško Pavlović; David Goldsmith; Judit Nagy; Miha Benedik; Dierik Verbeelen; Christian Tielemans; Rudolf P. Wüthrich; Pierre-Yves Martin; Carlos Martínez-Salgado; José L. Fernández-Martín; Jorge B. Cannata-Andía
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVESnA high body mass index (BMI) is associated with lower mortality in patients undergoing hemodialysis. Short-term weight gains and losses are also related to lower and higher mortality risk, respectively. The implications of weight gain or loss may, however, differ between obese individuals and their nonobese counterparts.nnnDESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTSnThe Current Management of Secondary Hyperparathyroidism: A Multicenter Observational Study (COSMOS) is an observational study including 6797 European hemodialysis patients recruited between February 2005 and July 2007, with prospective data collection every 6 months for 3 years. Time-dependent Cox proportional hazard regressions assessed the effect of BMI and weight changes on mortality. Analyses were performed after patient stratification according to their starting BMI.nnnRESULTSnAmong 6296 patients with complete data, 1643 died. At study entry, 42% of patients had a normal weight (BMI, 20-25 kg/m(2)), 11% were underweight, 31% were overweight, and 16% were obese (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m(2)). Weight loss or gain (<1% or >1% of body weight) was strongly associated with higher rates of mortality or survival, respectively. After stratification by BMI categories, this was true in nonobese categories and especially in underweight patients. In obese patients, however, the association between weight loss and mortality was attenuated (hazard ratio, 1.28 [95% confidence interval (CI), 0.74 to 2.14]), and no survival benefit of gaining weight was seen (hazard ratio, 0.98 [95% CI, 0.59 to 1.62]).nnnCONCLUSIONSnAssuming that these weight changes were unintentional, our study brings attention to rapid weight variations as a clinical sign of health monitoring in hemodialysis patients. In addition, a patients BMI modifies the strength of the association between weight changes with mortality.
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2013
Moniek W.M. van de Luijtgaarden; Marlies Noordzij; Wim Van Biesen; Cécile Couchoud; Giovanni Cancarini; Willem-Jan Bos; Friedo W. Dekker; Jose Luis Gorriz; Christos Iatrou; Christoph Wanner; Patrik Finne; Olivera Stojceva-Taneva; Svjetlana Čala; Vianda S. Stel; Charles R.V. Tomson; Kitty J. Jager
BACKGROUNDnFor some patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD), providing conservative care until death may be an acceptable alternative for renal replacement therapy (RRT). We aimed to estimate the occurrence of conservative care in Europe and evaluated opinions about which factors nephrologists consider important in their decision not to offer RRT.nnnMETHODSnWith a web-based survey sent to nephrologists in 11 European countries, we inquired how often RRT was not started in 2009 and how specific factors would influence the nephrologists decision to provide conservative care. We compared subgroups by nephrologist and facility characteristics using chi-square tests and Mann-Whitney U tests.nnnRESULTSnWe received 433 responses. Nephrologists decided to offer conservative care in 10% of their patients [interquartile range (IQR) 5-20%]. An additional 5% (IQR 2-10%) of the patients chose conservative care as they refused when nephrologists intended to start RRT. Patient preference (93%), severe clinical conditions (93%), vascular dementia (84%) and low physical functional status (75%) were considered extremely or quite important in the nephrologists decision to provide conservative care. Nephrologists from countries with a low incidence of RRT, not-for-profit centres and public centres more often scored these factors as extremely or quite important than their counterparts from high-incidence countries, for-profit centres and private centres.nnnCONCLUSIONSnNephrologists estimated conservative care was provided to up to 15% of their patients in 2009. The presence of severe clinical conditions, vascular dementia and a low physical functional status are important factors in the decision-making not to start RRT. Patient preference was considered as a very important factor, confirming the importance of extensive patient education and shared decision-making.
Circulation | 2017
Julio Núñez; Antoni Bayes-Genis; Faiez Zannad; Patrick Rossignol; Eduardo Núñez; Vicent Bodí; Gema Miñana; Enrique Santas; Francisco J. Chorro; Anna Mollar; Arturo Carratalá; Jorge Navarro; Jose Luis Gorriz; Josep Lupón; Oliver Husser; Marco Metra; Juan Sanchis
Background: The prognostic value of long-term potassium monitoring and dynamics in heart failure has not been characterized completely. We sought to determine the association between serum potassium values collected at follow-up with all-cause mortality in a prospective and consecutive cohort of patients discharged from a previous acute heart failure admission. Methods: Serum potassium was measured at every physician-patient encounter, including hospital admissions and ambulatory settings. The multivariable-adjusted association of serum potassium with mortality was assessed by using comprehensive state-of-the-art regression methods that can accommodate time-dependent exposure modeling. Results: The study sample included 2164 patients with a total of 16u2009116 potassium observations. Mean potassium at discharge was 4.3±0.48 mEq/L. Hypokalemia (<3.5 mEq/L), normokalemia (3.5–5.0 mEq/L), and hyperkalemia (>5 mEq/L) were observed at the index admission in 77 (3.6%), 1965 (90.8%), and 122 (5.6%) patients, respectively. At a median follow-up of 2.8 years (range, 0.03–12.8 years), 1090 patients died (50.4%). On a continuous scale, the multivariable-adjusted association of potassium values and mortality revealed a nonlinear association (U-shaped) with higher risk at both ends of its distribution (omnibus P=0.001). Likewise, the adjusted hazard ratios for hypokalemia and hyperkalemia, normokalemia as reference, were 2.35 (95% confidence interval, 1.40–3.93; P=0.001) and 1.55 (95% confidence interval, 1.11–2.16; P=0.011), respectively (omnibus P=0.0003). Furthermore, dynamic changes in potassium were independently associated with substantial differences in mortality risk. Potassium normalization was independently associated with lower mortality risk (P=0.001). Conclusions: Either modeled continuously or categorically, serum potassium levels during long-term monitoring were independently associated with mortality in patients with heart failure. Likewise, persistence of abnormal potassium levels was linked to a higher risk of death in comparison with patients who maintained or returned to normal values.
International Urology and Nephrology | 2016
Alan A. Sag; Adrian Covic; Gérard M. London; Marc G. Vervloet; David Goldsmith; Jose Luis Gorriz; Mehmet Kanbay
Arterial wall calcification, once considered an incidental finding, is now known to be a consistent and strong predictor of cardiovascular events in patients with chronic renal insufficiency. It is also commonly encountered in radiologic examinations as an incidental finding. Forthcoming bench, translational, and clinical data seek to establish this and pre-calcification changes as surrogate imaging biomarkers for noninvasive prognostication and treatment follow-up. Emerging paradigms seek to establish vascular calcification as a surrogate marker of disease. Imaging of pre-calcification and decalcification events may prove more important than imaging of the calcification itself. Data-driven approaches to screening will be necessary to limit radiation exposure and prevent over-utilization of expensive imaging techniques.
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2018
Pablo Molina; Belén Vizcaíno; Mariola Molina; Sandra Beltrán; Mercedes González-Moya; Antonio Mora; Cristina Castro-Alonso; Julia Kanter; Ana Avila; Jose Luis Gorriz; Nuria Estañ; Luis M. Pallardó; Denis Fouque; Juan Jesus Carrero
BackgroundnCompared with conventional haemodialysis (HD), online haemodiafiltration (OL-HDF) achieves a more efficient removal of uraemic toxins and reduces inflammation, which could favourably affect nutritional status. We evaluate the effect of OL-HDF on body composition and nutritional status in prevalent high-flux HD (HF-HD) patients.nnnMethodsnIn all, 33 adults with chronic kidney disease (CKD) Stage 5 undergoing maintenance HF-HD were assigned to post-dilution OL-HDF (n = 17) or to remain on HF-HD (n = 16, control group) for 12 months. The primary outcome was the change in lean tissue mass (LTM), intracellular water (ICW) and body cell mass (BCM) assessed by multifrequency bioimpedance spectroscopy (BIS) at baseline and 4, 8 and 12 months. The rate of change in these parameters was estimated with linear mixed-effects models.nnnResultsnCompared with OL-HDF, patients assigned to HF-HD experienced a gradual reduction in LTM, ICW and BCM. These differences reached statistical significance at Month 12, with a relative difference of 7.31 kg [95% confidence interval (CI) 2.50-12.11; Pu2009=u20090.003], 2.32 L (95% CI 0.63-4.01; Pu2009=u20090.008) and 5.20 kg (95% CI 1.74-8.66; Pu2009=u20090.004) for LTM, ICW and BCM, respectively. The normalized protein appearance increased in the OL-HDF group compared with the HF-HD group [0.26 g/kg/day (95% CI 0.05-0.47); Pu2009=u20090.002], with a relative reduction in high-sensitive C-reactive protein [-13.31 mg/dL (95% CIu2009-24.63 to -1.98); Pu2009=u20090.02] at Month 12.nnnConclusionsnOL-HDF for 1 year compared with HF-HD preserved muscle mass, increased protein intake and reduced the inflammatory state related to uraemia and dialysis, supporting the hypothesis that high convection volume can benefit nutritional status and prevent protein-energy wasting in HD patients.
Kidney International | 2018
Katharina Brück; Kitty J. Jager; Carmine Zoccali; Aminu K. Bello; Roberto Minutolo; Kyriakos Ioannou; Francis Verbeke; Henry Völzke; Johan Ärnlöv; Daniela Leonardis; Pietro Manuel Ferraro; Hermann Brenner; Ben Caplin; Philip A. Kalra; Christoph Wanner; Alberto Martinez Castelao; Jose Luis Gorriz; Stein Hallan; Dietrich Rothenbacher; Dino Gibertoni; Luca De Nicola; Georg Heinze; Wim Van Biesen; Vianda S. Stel
The incidence of renal replacement therapy varies across countries. However, little is known about the epidemiology of chronic kidney disease (CKD) outcomes. Here we describe progression and mortality risk of patients with CKD but not on renal replacement therapy at outpatient nephrology clinics across Europe using individual data from nine CKD cohorts participating in the European CKD Burden Consortium. A joint model assessed the mean change in estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) and mortality risk simultaneously, thereby accounting for mortality risk when estimating eGFR decline and vice versa, while also correcting for the measurement error in eGFR. Results were adjusted for important risk factors (baseline eGFR, age, sex, albuminuria, primary renal disease, diabetes, hypertension, obesity and smoking) in 27,771 patients from five countries. The adjusted mean annual eGFR decline varied from 0.77 (95% confidence interval 0.45, 1.08) ml/min/1.73m2 in the Belgium cohort to 2.43 (2.11, 2.75) ml/min/1.73m2 in the Spanish cohort. As compared to the Italian PIRP cohort, the adjusted mortality hazard ratio varied from 0.22 (0.11, 0.43) in the London LACKABO cohort to 1.30 (1.13, 1.49) in the English CRISIS cohort. These results suggest that the eGFR decline showed minor variation but mortality showed the most variation. Thus, different health care organization systems are potentially associated with differences in outcome of patients with CKD within Europe. These results can be used by policy makers to plan resources on a regional, national and European level.