Estimating serum‐ionized magnesium concentration in hemodialysis patients

Introduction Cardiovascular mortality is significantly increased in kidney failure with replacement therapy (KFRT) patients, which is partly mediated by enhanced vascular calcification. Magnesium appears to have anticalcifying capabilities, and hypomagnesemia has been associated with increased morta...

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Veröffentlicht in:Hemodialysis international 2021-10, Vol.25 (4), p.523-531
Hauptverfasser: Holzmann‐Littig, Christopher, Kuechle, Claudius, Bietenbeck, Andreas, McCallum, Wendy, Heemann, Uwe, Renders, Lutz, Steubl, Dominik
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Introduction Cardiovascular mortality is significantly increased in kidney failure with replacement therapy (KFRT) patients, which is partly mediated by enhanced vascular calcification. Magnesium appears to have anticalcifying capabilities, and hypomagnesemia has been associated with increased mortality in KFRT patients. Ionized magnesium represents the biologically and physiologically active form. As serum ionized magnesium (Mgion) is difficult to assess in clinical routine estimating equations derived from routinely assessed laboratory parameters could facilitate medical treatment. Methods We developed equations to estimate serum Mgion using linear regression analysis in 191 hemodialysis (HD) patients. Reference test was measured ionized magnesium (Mgion). As index tests, we chose estimated Mgion using total magnesium (Mgtot) and other laboratory and demographic variable candidates. Equations were internally validated, using 749 subsequent Mgion measurements. Findings The median patient age was 65 years, 67.5% of the patients were male. Median (interquartile range [IQR]) measured Mgion was 0.64 [0.57, 0.72] mmol/L, 11 (6%) patients were hypo‐ (i.e., 0.60 mmol/L). The final equation at the end of the development process included Mgtot, serum ionized, and total calcium concentrations. In the validation dataset, bias (i.e., median difference between measured and estimated Mgion, −0.017 [−0.020, −0.014] mmol/L) and precision (i.e., IQR of bias 0.043 [0.039, 0.047] mmol/L) were small, 90% [88, 93] of estimated values were ±10% of measured values. The equation detected normomagnesemia with overall good diagnostic accuracy (area under the receiver‐operating curve 0.91 [0.89, 0.93]). Discussion Mgion can be estimated from equations containing routinely assessed laboratory variables with high accuracy and good overall performance. These equations might simplify the assessment of ionized magnesium levels in the individual hemodialysis patients and help the treating physician to guide the overall treatment.
ISSN:1492-7535
1542-4758
DOI:10.1111/hdi.12944