Journal of Occupational Health
Online ISSN : 1348-9585
Print ISSN : 1341-9145
ISSN-L : 1341-9145
Originals
An Integrative Study of the Genetic, Social and Environmental Determinants of Chronic Kidney Disease Characterized by Tubulointerstitial Damages in the North Central Region of Sri Lanka
Shanika NanayakkaraSTMLD SenevirathnaTilak AbeysekeraRohana ChandrajithNeelakanthi RatnatungaEDL GunarathneJunxia YanToshiaki HitomiEri MusoToshiyuki KomiyaKouji H. HaradaWanyang LiuHatasu KobayashiHiroko OkudaHideyuki SawatariFumihiko MatsudaRyo YamadaTakao WatanabeHideki MiyatakaSeiichiro HimenoAkio Koizumi
Author information
JOURNAL FREE ACCESS FULL-TEXT HTML
Supplementary material

2014 Volume 56 Issue 1 Pages 28-38

Details
Abstract

Objectives: Previous investigations on chronic kidney disease of unknown etiology characterized by tubulointerstitial damages (CKDu) in the North Central Region (NCR) of Sri Lanka have supported the involvement of social, environmental and genetic factors in its pathogenesis. Methods: We conducted a social-environmental-and-genetic epidemiology study on a male population in NCR to investigate the genetic and environmental contributors. We recruited 311 case-series patients and 504 control candidates. Of the 504 control candidates, 218 (43%) were eliminated because of the presence of hypertension, proteinuria, high HbA1c, high serum creatinine or high alpha-1 microglobulin in urine. Results and Discussion: None of 18 metals measured (μg//) in urine, including Cd, As and Pb, showed significantly higher concentrations in cases compared with controls. As speciation results showed that 75–80% of total urinary As was in the form of arsenobetaine, which is non-toxic to humans. None of the metal concentrations in drinking water samples exceeded guideline values. A genome-wide association study (GWAS) was conducted to determine the genetic contributors. The GWAS yielded a genome-wide significant association with CKDu for a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP; rs6066043; p=5.23 × 10−9 in quantitative trait locus analysis; p=3.73 × 10−9 in dichotomous analysis) in SLC13A3 (sodium-dependent dicarboxylate transporter member 3). The population attributable fraction and odds ratio for this SNP were 50% and 2.13. Genetic susceptibility was identified as the major risk factor for CKDu. However, 43% of the apparently healthy malepopulation suffers from non-communicable diseases, suggesting their possible influence on CKDu progression.(J Occup Health 2014; 56: 28–38)

Content from these authors

This article cannot obtain the latest cited-by information.

2014 by the Japan Society for Occupational Health
Previous article Next article
feedback
Top