An evaluation of a shared primary and secondary care nephrology service for managing patients with moderate to advanced CKD
An evaluation of a shared primary and secondary care nephrology service for managing patients with moderate to advanced CKD
Background: Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is common, and nephrology services may not cope with the comprehensive referral of patients with CKD. We evaluated a shared primary and secondary care nephrology scheme, hypothesizing that some patients with less progressive moderate to advanced CKD can be identified and safely managed without attending the renal unit.
Methods: A retrospective review of 949 new referrals with stages 3 to 5 CKD managed in either the hospital nephrology clinic (HC) or the shared care scheme (SCS), in which nephrologists review patients remotely by using regular biochemical tests and clinical data recorded in primary care.
Results: Two hundred sixty-six patients (28%) were enrolled in the SCS and 683 patients (72%) were managed solely in the HC. Median time to entering the SCS was 111 days (interquartile range, 0 to 328 days). Baseline factors independently predictive of enrollment in the SCS were increasing age, greater glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and serum albumin levels, and no diabetic nephropathy. Few SCS patients did not attend reviews. Forty-one patients (15%) required recall to the HC, mostly because of a decline in GFR. Beneficial changes were seen in blood pressure levels and prescribing of angiotensin-system inhibitors from first referral to 3 years in all patients. Those enrolled in the SCS had good prognosis, with a lower risk for death or renal replacement therapy than the HC group after adjustment for age, sex, GFR, diabetic nephropathy, and vascular disease (hazard ratio, 0.64; 95% confidence interval, 0.38 to 0.89; P = 0.003).
Conclusion: In this setting, it was possible to select nearly 30% of patients with stages 3 to 5 CKD for management in the SCS. More than half enrolled within 4 months of nephrology referral. Systematic surveillance was effective, and most patients remained stable, with few progressing to renal replacement therapy or death.
chronic kidney disease (ckd), epidemiology and outcomes, progression of chronic renal failure, glomerular filtration rate (gfr), survival
103-114
Jones, Chris
93ef9692-7414-40e6-adb5-948edb2b7424
Roderick, Paul
dbb3cd11-4c51-4844-982b-0eb30ad5085a
Harris, Scott
19ea097b-df15-4f0f-be19-8ac42c190028
Rogerson, Mary
37d0a242-f479-4d8c-9a5c-5b9e4d5dca16
2006
Jones, Chris
93ef9692-7414-40e6-adb5-948edb2b7424
Roderick, Paul
dbb3cd11-4c51-4844-982b-0eb30ad5085a
Harris, Scott
19ea097b-df15-4f0f-be19-8ac42c190028
Rogerson, Mary
37d0a242-f479-4d8c-9a5c-5b9e4d5dca16
Jones, Chris, Roderick, Paul, Harris, Scott and Rogerson, Mary
(2006)
An evaluation of a shared primary and secondary care nephrology service for managing patients with moderate to advanced CKD.
American Journal of Kidney Diseases, 47 (1), .
(doi:10.1053/j.ajkd.2005.09.020).
Abstract
Background: Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is common, and nephrology services may not cope with the comprehensive referral of patients with CKD. We evaluated a shared primary and secondary care nephrology scheme, hypothesizing that some patients with less progressive moderate to advanced CKD can be identified and safely managed without attending the renal unit.
Methods: A retrospective review of 949 new referrals with stages 3 to 5 CKD managed in either the hospital nephrology clinic (HC) or the shared care scheme (SCS), in which nephrologists review patients remotely by using regular biochemical tests and clinical data recorded in primary care.
Results: Two hundred sixty-six patients (28%) were enrolled in the SCS and 683 patients (72%) were managed solely in the HC. Median time to entering the SCS was 111 days (interquartile range, 0 to 328 days). Baseline factors independently predictive of enrollment in the SCS were increasing age, greater glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and serum albumin levels, and no diabetic nephropathy. Few SCS patients did not attend reviews. Forty-one patients (15%) required recall to the HC, mostly because of a decline in GFR. Beneficial changes were seen in blood pressure levels and prescribing of angiotensin-system inhibitors from first referral to 3 years in all patients. Those enrolled in the SCS had good prognosis, with a lower risk for death or renal replacement therapy than the HC group after adjustment for age, sex, GFR, diabetic nephropathy, and vascular disease (hazard ratio, 0.64; 95% confidence interval, 0.38 to 0.89; P = 0.003).
Conclusion: In this setting, it was possible to select nearly 30% of patients with stages 3 to 5 CKD for management in the SCS. More than half enrolled within 4 months of nephrology referral. Systematic surveillance was effective, and most patients remained stable, with few progressing to renal replacement therapy or death.
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Published date: 2006
Keywords:
chronic kidney disease (ckd), epidemiology and outcomes, progression of chronic renal failure, glomerular filtration rate (gfr), survival
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Local EPrints ID: 24352
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/24352
ISSN: 0272-6386
PURE UUID: d93adbbb-f457-43e0-8a82-5f2b12f1ac9d
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Date deposited: 30 Mar 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:48
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Author:
Chris Jones
Author:
Mary Rogerson
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