Early Diabetic Kidney Disease and Hyperfiltration
Early diabetic kidney disease is the phase before fixed structural damage becomes clinically apparent, often characterised by glomerular hyperfiltration: an increase in the glomerular filtration rate above normal. Hyperfiltration is one of the earliest measurable kidney abnormalities in diabetes and has long been proposed as a marker, and possible driver, of later progression.
Definition
Glomerular hyperfiltration in diabetes is a supranormal glomerular filtration rate observed especially early in the disease, arising chiefly from raised intraglomerular pressure, and considered an early-stage feature of diabetic kidney disease.
Scope
This topic covers the early functional changes of the diabetic kidney, centred on glomerular hyperfiltration, its haemodynamic basis, and the staging concept that situates it before microalbuminuria and overt nephropathy. It is reference material on the natural history of the disease and not clinical guidance.
Core questions
- What functional changes mark the earliest stages of diabetic kidney disease?
- What causes glomerular hyperfiltration in diabetes?
- How does hyperfiltration relate to later albuminuria and filtration decline?
Key concepts
- Glomerular filtration rate (GFR)
- Intraglomerular hypertension
- Afferent arteriolar vasodilatation
- Tubuloglomerular feedback
- Mogensen staging
- Kidney hypertrophy
Key theories
- Hyperfiltration as a precursor stage
- Within a staged natural-history model, an early phase of elevated filtration precedes microalbuminuria and overt nephropathy, framing hyperfiltration as an initial and potentially modifiable feature of diabetic kidney disease.
Mechanisms
Hyperfiltration is attributed largely to relative dilatation of the afferent glomerular arteriole, which raises glomerular capillary pressure and single-nephron filtration; altered tubuloglomerular feedback driven by increased proximal sodium-glucose reabsorption is described as a contributing mechanism. These haemodynamic changes accompany early kidney hypertrophy and precede the structural lesions that morphometric studies link to later functional decline.
Clinical relevance
The early phase is of interest because it represents a window before irreversible structural injury, and hyperfiltration has been studied as an early indicator of risk. This entry summarises the physiology and staging of early disease and is educational rather than a basis for individual screening or treatment decisions.
Epidemiology
Hyperfiltration is reported in a substantial proportion of people with recent-onset diabetes, with prevalence estimates varying by how filtration is measured and by the threshold used to define it, as discussed in reviews of the phenomenon.
History
Mogensen's work in the late twentieth century placed glomerular hyperfiltration at the start of a staged model of diabetic kidney disease, influencing how the natural history was conceptualised. Subsequent reviews revisited its mechanisms and prognostic meaning in light of newer measurement methods.
Debates
- Does hyperfiltration predict progression?
- Whether early glomerular hyperfiltration reliably predicts later decline in kidney function remains contested, with heterogeneity in study definitions and measurement methods limiting firm conclusions.
Key figures
- Carl Erik Mogensen
- Jaap Joles
Related topics
Seminal works
- mogensen-1994
- tonneijck-2017
Frequently asked questions
- What is glomerular hyperfiltration?
- It is a higher-than-normal glomerular filtration rate, one of the earliest measurable kidney changes in diabetes, thought to result mainly from raised pressure within the glomerulus.
- Why does early diabetic kidney disease matter if there is no albuminuria yet?
- Because functional changes such as hyperfiltration can precede albuminuria and structural damage, the early phase is studied as a potential window before irreversible injury develops.