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1 study arm (all cases and among those without renal impairment).
2 athic changes, low platelet count, and acute renal impairment).
3 management of patients with both cancer and renal impairment.
4 t at the detriment of patients with ESLD and renal impairment.
5 oronary syndrome (NSTE-ACS) in patients with renal impairment.
6 ulation of patients with type 2 diabetes and renal impairment.
7 cular disease, inflammation, thrombosis, and renal impairment.
8 nts with AF are validated but do not include renal impairment.
9 proliferation were significantly enhanced in renal impairment.
10 vascular inflammation and atherosclerosis in renal impairment.
11 n was increased in atherosclerotic mice with renal impairment.
12 in HIV-positive persons without preexisting renal impairment.
13 elderly people with no clinical diagnosis of renal impairment.
14 recommended affect acute rejection rates and renal impairment.
15 e renal impairment compared to those with no renal impairment.
16 ct patient prognosis in patients with MM and renal impairment.
17 mpared with the AF population without severe renal impairment.
18 proportionally suppressed with the degree of renal impairment.
19 s seen in the patient population with severe renal impairment.
20 e deliberately excluded patients with severe renal impairment.
21 sity anticoagulation in patients with severe renal impairment.
22 ion between invasive Moraxella infection and renal impairment.
23 cal appearance, proteinuria, and progressive renal impairment.
24 a high dose, and subgroups of patients with renal impairment.
25 yocardial injury, myocardial infarction, and renal impairment.
26 thic hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia, and renal impairment.
27 midronate dose in patients with pre-existing renal impairment.
28 buminuria and 1,449 (29%) of 5,032 developed renal impairment.
29 veloped albuminuria and nearly 30% developed renal impairment.
30 eloped albuminuria and 1,132 (28%) developed renal impairment.
31 herosclerosis, even in the setting of subtle renal impairment.
32 racial disparities at the highest levels of renal impairment.
33 n patients with type 2 diabetes and moderate renal impairment.
34 atinine clearance frequently fails to detect renal impairment.
35 d event, infection, diabetes, malignancy, or renal impairment.
36 or patients with heart failure, diabetes, or renal impairment.
37 after liver transplantation, but they cause renal impairment.
38 should be used with caution in patients with renal impairment.
39 ut ethnic/racial disparities for early-onset renal impairment.
40 in which both groups had a similar level of renal impairment.
41 21 of whom had HIVN with varying degrees of renal impairment.
42 led five loci involved in the development of renal impairment.
43 scintigraphic parameters and the severity of renal impairment.
44 ole of the tubulointerstitium in the role of renal impairment.
45 n, and had a lower hematocrit value and more renal impairment.
46 red in patients with moderate, but not mild, renal impairment.
47 f of the genetic variation in key indices of renal impairment.
48 agnosed with essential hypertension and mild renal impairment.
49 gulation therapy, and substantial hepatic or renal impairment.
50 s trended lower at baseline and 3 hours with renal impairment.
51 Of 4726 patients identified, 904 (19%) had renal impairment.
52 erythematosus that can lead to irreversible renal impairment.
53 effect of TAVR among patients with baseline renal impairment.
54 er aortic valve replacement in patients with renal impairment.
55 an who presented with nephrotic syndrome and renal impairment.
56 , hypertension, hyperlipidemia, smoking, and renal impairment.
57 patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) with renal impairment.
58 I or IV was seen in 5 patients with baseline renal impairment.
59 clinical indications or severity of baseline renal impairment.
60 d introduction of sirolimus in patients with renal impairment.
61 mg every 48 hours in patients with moderate renal impairment.
63 APACHE II score >=15, 24.7% moderate/severe renal impairment, 42.9% were >=65 years old, and 66.1% w
64 ort including patients with risk factors for renal impairment a marked decline in renal function was
65 ere presence of CRAB (C=calcium elevation; R=renal impairment; A=anaemia; B=bone involvement) criteri
66 icant, independent predictors for death were renal impairment, acidosis, parasitemia, and plasma PfHR
67 independent predictors of AKI were baseline renal impairment (adjusted hazard ratio, 4.15; 95% confi
68 infection was independently associated with renal impairment (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] = 2.1; 95% c
73 infection was independently associated with renal impairment, albuminuria, and proximal renal tubula
77 ow-up > or =1 year, 38% of patients with any renal impairment and 51% with moderate to severe impairm
78 ng the pathophysiologic interactions between renal impairment and brain function is important in orde
80 Irrespective of diagnosis, patients with renal impairment and elevated cardiac troponin concentra
81 ffected by HFD, in marked contrast to severe renal impairment and glomerulopathy in the wild-type mic
84 -3 concentrations increased with progressive renal impairment and independently associated with cardi
85 has not been studied in patients with severe renal impairment and is not recommended in this setting.
86 ke (IS)/thromboembolism (TE) associated with renal impairment and its incremental predictive value ov
89 udies characterizing the association between renal impairment and mortality in 80,098 hospitalized an
90 to a PK/PD-driven dosing approach, baseline renal impairment and older age strongly predict AKI occu
92 EBR/GZR is approved for use in patients with renal impairment and patients on dialysis, but not in th
95 pressants given as monotherapy, for example, renal impairment and posttransplant lymphoproliferative
97 the post-treatment development of persistent renal impairment and the 60-day rate of death or readmis
98 kinetics of imatinib in cancer patients with renal impairment and to develop dosing guidelines for im
99 erated doses of oxaliplatin in patients with renal impairment and to develop formal guidelines for ox
100 ation between race/ethnicity and early-onset renal impairment and to identify other risk factors that
101 d perfusion is contraindicated (eg, allergy, renal impairment) and holds promise in differentiating t
102 bidities (notably cardiovascular disease and renal impairment) and the need to avoid hypoglycaemia, w
104 t of necrotizing crescentic GN, albuminuria, renal impairment, and accumulation of CD4(+) T cells and
107 ables such as systemic ventricular function, renal impairment, and diuretic therapy (adjusted hazard
108 dose adjustments for sex, age, or hepatic or renal impairment, and has a safety profile similar to th
110 cannulation methods, hemoglobin level, coma, renal impairment, and hepatic impairment were not associ
111 ion, left ventricular diastolic dysfunction, renal impairment, and leg ulcers, were associated with e
113 adjustment is not required in patients with renal impairment, and monitoring can be less intense bec
114 HD had more heart failure, coronary disease, renal impairment, and persistent atrial fibrillation.
115 known about the effects of milder degrees of renal impairment, and previous studies have relied on le
116 sulodexide in patients with type 2 diabetes, renal impairment, and significant proteinuria (>900 mg/d
118 be challenging to interpret in patients with renal impairment, and the effectiveness of testing in th
119 ly restricted to patients with pretransplant renal impairment, and this strategy could result into wo
120 % confidence interval [CI]: 0.75 to 1.49 for renal impairment; and hazard ratio: 1.09; 95% CI: 0.84 t
121 /m(2) or higher; severe cardiac, hepatic, or renal impairment; and more than two severe hypoglycaemic
122 00-1.01, increase per 10x9 decrease), severe renal impairment (aOR 5.14, 95%CI 2.65-9.97), and low al
126 n race/ethnicity related risk of early-onset renal impairment are particularly large among men and ar
129 diac troponin identified fewer patients with renal impairment as low risk and more as high risk, but
130 presentation identified 17% of patients with renal impairment as low risk for the primary outcome (ne
131 re the role of toxic solutes retained due to renal impairment as mediators of cardiovascular risk.
132 ir impact on UPV and the other parameters of renal impairment, as well as an interaction with BP.
133 er transplantation were associated with less renal impairment at 1 year (RR = 0.51 [0.38-0.69]), with
134 the 99th centile were lower in patients with renal impairment at 50.0% (95% CI, 45.2%-54.8%) and 70.9
135 for age >50 years (HR 3.49, P = 0.087), mild renal impairment at baseline (HR 4.49, P = 0.073), and h
137 ty rates in patients with moderate to severe renal impairment at baseline; however, on subsequent ana
140 Familial childhood gout with progressive renal impairment attributable to mutations of the uromod
141 nephrectomized normal littermates to exhibit renal impairment because of the combination of reduced n
142 ence of hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and renal impairment (but had higher prevalence of stroke an
144 al agents (ARVs) are associated with chronic renal impairment, but the extent of such adverse events
145 disoproxil fumarate (TDF) has been linked to renal impairment, but the extent to which this impairmen
146 rsus 5% [95% CI: 7.3% to 38%]; P=0.006), and renal impairment by 23% (30% versus 7%; [95% CI: 6.4 to
148 Here, we describe a 40-year-old man with renal impairment, cardiac and GI symptoms, and periphera
149 rtension [HTN], hyperlipidemia, alcohol use, renal impairment, chronic kidney disease [CKD], and oste
150 ia (microalbuminuria or macroalbuminuria) or renal impairment (Cockcroft-Gault estimated creatinine c
151 , 22.0) respectively among those with severe renal impairment compared to those with no renal impairm
152 Events were more common in patients with renal impairment compared with those without (48% versus
153 hepatorenal syndrome (HRS2) is a functional renal impairment complicating end-stage liver disease.
155 ll-cause mortality risks associated with any renal impairment (creatinine >1.0 mg/dl, creatinine clea
156 3 patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus and renal impairment (creatinine 1.5-3 mg/dL) who were candi
161 , with higher rates of hypercholesterolemia, renal impairment, diabetes, and multivessel and left mai
162 r disease, hypertension, raised cholesterol, renal impairment, diabetes, obesity, hypothyroidism, hyp
163 After adjustment for CHADS(2) risk factors, renal impairment did not significantly increase the risk
164 age, a preexisting do-not-resuscitate order, renal impairment, disseminated cancer, preoperative seps
165 cardiac troponin I in those with and without renal impairment (estimated glomerular filtration rate <
166 This substudy of patients with baseline renal impairment (estimated glomerular filtration rate [
170 ry amyloidosis that typically manifests with renal impairment, gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms, and si
172 group) of whom 58 (group A) had CNI-induced renal impairment (glomerular filtration rate [GFR] <50 m
173 ere, 29.1% with moderate, and 9.2% with mild renal impairment had dabigatran levels >20 ng/ml compare
174 of renal function, but patients with severe renal impairment had higher 30- and 90-day mortality rat
178 -generated random sequence and stratified by renal impairment, HbA1c, and background antidiabetes med
179 sed age (HR 1.63), U.S. residency (HR 1.61), renal impairment (HR 1.50), stroke/transient ischemic at
180 sex (HR, 1.70; 95% CI, 1.03-2.80; P=0.036), renal impairment (HR, 2.12; 95% CI, 1.20-3.73; P=0.010),
181 , GI disease (HR, 7.3; 95% CI, 3.6 to 14.8), renal impairment (HR, 8.3; 95% CI, 3.0 to 23.2), neurolo
182 nce interval [CI]: 1.59 to 2.77; p < 0.001); renal impairment (HR: 1.98; 95% CI: 1.42 to 2.76; p < 0.
183 erious angioedema but lower proportions with renal impairment, hyperkalemia, and cough than the enala
185 n 43.7% of patients, including CTCAE grade 1 renal impairment in 25.0% and CTCAE grade 2 in 18.8%.
186 patients who had renal revascularisation for renal impairment in a defined geographical area (West of
191 r use were independent predictors of chronic renal impairment in HIV-positive persons without preexis
192 Urinary creatinine clearance underestimated renal impairment in one patient out of two; the bias of
196 The mechanisms and significance of chronic renal impairment in scleroderma need to be better define
197 ys is a marker for progression of CKD in the Renal Impairment in Secondary Care (RIISC) cohort, a pro
198 n dialysis or with a kidney transplant): (1) Renal Impairment in Secondary Care (RIISC, Queen Elizabe
199 ascular events/procedures and development of renal impairment in the CAFE cohort (unadjusted, P<0.000
201 xtramedullary involvement, and patients with renal impairment, including patients with renal failure
202 mpared with normal renal function, even mild renal impairment increased the 10-yr risk for mortality
204 , pain, urinary tract obstruction with acute renal impairment, infection, procedure-related illness,
209 ents with and without renal dysfunction, yet renal impairment is an important determinant of the prov
213 this study was to determine whether moderate renal impairment is associated with incident dementia am
218 0 mg every 48 hours for adults with moderate renal impairment is often confusing and inconvenient.
222 dities, such as impaired glucose metabolism, renal impairment, left ventricular hypertrophy, heart fa
223 e often older and have a higher incidence of renal impairment, may be better able to tolerate MPDL328
227 acute rejection [n = 957] and two trials for renal impairment [n = 712]) showed that "reduced tacroli
228 patients with moderate or moderately severe renal impairment, no difference in adverse events compar
230 consecutive liver transplant candidates with renal impairment of unclear etiology referred to determi
231 17a(-/-) bone marrow abolished the effect of renal impairment on aortic CD11b(+) myeloid cell accumul
232 the outcome in patients who received MMF for renal impairment on tacrolimus-based immunosuppression.
234 ated pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, and renal impairment or substantial diuretic requirement des
235 ent options for post-LT patients with severe renal impairment or who are on dialysis, nor do publishe
236 ncrease in base deficit [95% CI 1.93-2.28]), renal impairment (OR 1.71 for a 2-fold increase in blood
237 mic outcomes (myocardial infarction, stroke, renal impairment, or failure) were prespecified as copri
238 ction, recurrence of autoimmune process(es), renal impairment, or the concomitant presence of other m
239 ssess the associations between the composite renal impairment outcomes and the combination ADM (antid
242 97.5%-99.9%), in comparison with 56% without renal impairment (P<0.001) with similar performance (neg
243 n patients with type 2 diabetes and moderate renal impairment, potentially providing a new treatment
244 ores did not influence likelihood of PTx and renal impairment predicted against PTx (OR 0.35, P < 0.0
246 patients with type 2 diabetes without overt renal impairment, raised ACR is associated with higher A
250 The rates of hyperkalemia, hypotension, and renal impairment/renal failure were higher in the aliski
256 patients with type 2 diabetes without overt renal impairment (serum creatinine <150 micromol/L).
258 isk factors for osteonecrosis of the jaw and renal impairment should be assessed, and any pending den
259 but not recommended for patients with severe renal impairment (SRI, i.e. creatinine clearance < 30ml/
260 elevated total cholesterol, type 2 diabetes, renal impairment (stage 4 chronic kidney disease), and h
263 alvage in patients with significant baseline renal impairment that were previously denied interventio
264 5 mg twice daily appeared not to have severe renal impairment, the intended population for this dose.
265 levels within 12 to 24 h is more common with renal impairment, the time to bleeding cessation and the
266 hypotension, leukopenia, metabolic acidosis, renal impairment, thrombocytopenia, and disseminated coa
267 ents with deep vein thrombosis, hepatitis C, renal impairment, thyroid disease, and liver disease fro
268 blood pressure-lowering therapy and without renal impairment to look for metabolites associated with
273 nverse of serum creatinine (1/SCr); moderate renal impairment was defined as SCr > or = 1.3 mg/dl for
275 In Cox regression analysis, pretransplant renal impairment was found to be an independent predicto
279 s with telaprevir (TLV) and boceprevir (BOC) renal impairment was not reported as a relevant adverse
282 hymal stromal cells, postischemic functional renal impairment was reduced, but there was no evidence
284 ng guidelines for patients with pre-existing renal impairment were added to the zoledronic acid packa
285 th troponin concentrations >99th centile and renal impairment were at greater risk of subsequent myoc
288 Additional independent risk factors for renal impairment were female sex, decreased waist circum
289 OR: 0.18, 95% CI: 0.04 to 0.75; P=0.006) and renal impairment were independent of other covariables.
290 ailure Assessment (SOFA), score and baseline renal impairment were significantly associated with AKI.
291 d physician diagnosis of gout and degrees of renal impairment were the primary focus of the present a
292 utcomes at 1 year, and even mild or moderate renal impairments were associated with an increased risk
293 cretion and plasma NOx levels (corrected for renal impairment) were inversely related to disease seve
294 Independent risk factors of IS/TE (including renal impairment) were investigated in Cox regression mo
295 kalemia (K+>7.0 meq/L) and a mild reversible renal impairment, which were thought to reflect in part
296 iopathic osteoporosis (without indication of renal impairment), who received MRI 8 months prior to bi
299 e first month was positively correlated with renal impairment within 1 year (r = 0.73; p = 0.003), bu
300 macokinetic data showed dose adjustments for renal impairment yielded similar zanamivir exposures.