Coping with chronic kidney disease.
by Collins, Allan
Chronic kidney disease affects more than 20 million Americans and
costs our health care system billions of dollars annually. About 8
million individuals have an estimated glomerular filtration rate less
than 60 mL/min per 1.73 [m.sup.2], and of that number, 100,000 patients
per year reach the stage where they need dialysis.
The challenge to nephrology is to address chronic kidney disease
early and plan for the transition from stage 4 disease to stage 5
end-stage renal disease (ESRD) and dialysis. Typically, nephrologists do
not see chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients until they are at stage 5,
but waiting to refer patients until dialysis is finally needed is not
the best approach.
Primary care physicians can help nephrologists meet this challenge.
In fact, they have an essential role to play in helping CKD patients
manage the heavy burden of cardiovascular disease and facilitating their
transition to ESRD and dialysis. Currently, this transition is not
managed well for a variety of reasons.
There appears to be little planning for the transition to ESRD in
this country. We do not have a CKD education benefit in the Medicare
program, nor do we have a benefit from other health plans that
encourages referral, access placement, dietary management, and modality
selection such as early kidney transplantation versus the different
forms of dialysis.
For example, 80% of ESRD patients use a catheter as their first
access to dialysis. This is dramatically different from almost every
other country. In Japan, the percentages are virtually reversed, as only
about 10% of ESRD patients get catheters as their first dialysis access.
In other countries, catheter use is even less common. Catheter
utilization contributes to the high morbidity from infections and high
mortality in the first year of dialysis in the United States.
CKD among the elderly is common and is likely to increase as our
population ages and the current diabetes epidemic continues. Primary
care physicians can do much to monitor disease progression. They can be
vigilant about prescribing ACE inhibitors and angiotensin receptor
blockers for their CKD patients, as these agents have been shown to
reduce cardiovascular events and slow progression of kidney disease.
Above all, they should consider referral to nephrologists early to
address the high rates of cardiovascular events that occur in CKD
patients and that kill many of them before they get to dialysis. Early
referral will also help in the planning for early transplantation before
dialysis is started in order to avoid the vascular access complications.
DR. COLLINS, professor of medicine at the University of Minnesota,
Minneapolis, is president of the National Kidney Foundation.
BY ALLAN COLLINS, M.D.
COPYRIGHT 2007 International Medical News
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Copyright 2007 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.