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Chronic kidney disease mortality trends in selected Central America countries, 1997–2013: clues to an epidemic of chronic interstitial nephritis of agricultural communities
  1. Pedro Ordunez1,
  2. F Javier Nieto2,
  3. Ramon Martinez1,
  4. Patricia Soliz1,
  5. Gloria P Giraldo1,
  6. Susan Anne Mott3,
  7. Wendy E Hoy3
  1. 1 Pan American Health Organization, Washington, District of Columbia, USA
  2. 2 College of Public Health and Human Sciences, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, USA
  3. 3 Centre for Chronic Disease and CKD. CRE, UQCCR, Faculty of Medicine, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
  1. Correspondence to Dr Pedro Ordunez, Department of Non Communicable Diseases and Mental Health, Pan American Health Organization, NW, Washington, D.C. 20037, USA; ordunezp{at}paho.org

Abstract

Background In Central America, chronic interstitial nephritis of agricultural communities (CINAC) has reached epidemic proportions. Clusters of cases have been described in several farming communities. Its aetiology remains uncertain and a controversy exists on its key triggers, among them the heat stress–dehydration mechanism and the toxic exposure to agrochemicals.

Methods This study analysed the mortality pattern and trend of chronic kidney disease code N18 (CKD-N18) according to the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems-10th Revision, the proxy and the underlying cause of death, in four selected Central American countries from 1997 to 2013. In addition, we used exponential regression to retrospectively model the likely onset and prior trajectory of the epidemic.

Results Between 1997 and 2013, CKD-N18 mortality accounting 47 885 deaths (31% were female), 19 533 of which occurred below 60 years of age (26% female). The excess of mortality starts as early as 10–14 years of age for both boys and girls. El Salvador and Nicaragua, with mortality rates between 9-fold and 12-fold higher than reference countries, were the most affected. Statistical modelling suggests that the epidemic commenced around the mid-1970s, coinciding with important changes in modes of agricultural production.

Conclusions This study provides the most comprehensive mortality analysis of this epidemic published to date and confirms an excess of CKD-N18 mortality and its relation with the epidemic of CINAC. The overall trends and the mortality pattern among women, children and adolescents suggest that the heat stress–dehydration hypothesis cannot fully explain this epidemic and that other environmental factors, more likely agricultural practices and agrochemicals, may be causally involved.

  • chronic di
  • epidemiology of chronic non communicable diseases
  • public health
  • mortality
  • social inequalities

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Footnotes

  • Contributors PO, WEH, RM: research idea, study design, analysis; PO, WEH, RM, FJN, PS, GPG, SAM: interpretation of findings and MS preparation. Each author contributed important intellectual content during MS drafting and revision and accepts accountability for the overall work.

  • Disclaimer The findings and conclusions in this report are solely responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position of the Pan American Health Organization or any of the authors’ affiliated institutions.

  • Competing interests None declared.

  • Provenance and peer review Commissioned; externally peer reviewed.