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6 more Hongkongers with chronic kidney disease to get dialysis treatment at ... - South China Morning Post (subscription) PDF Print

A haemodialysis training centre opened in April at United Christian Hospital in Kwun Tong will enable six more chronic kidney disease patients in Kowloon East to receive the treatment in their homes this year, the Hospital Authority announced as part of its annual plan for the group of hospitals in the area.

The service was first introduced to public hospitals in 2006, and the training centre is the fifth one to open under the authority.

Home haemodialysis allows the treatment - which removes waste from blood for patients whose kidneys are unable to do so - to be carried out in homes for around six to eight hours every other night as required while a patient is asleep.

If the procedure is done in hospital it requires a patient to be there three times a week for around five hours each time. Home treatment therefore minimises discomfort and the impact on patients' lives.

"It's much milder, as we can use the entire night to release water and toxins," said Dr Sunny Wong Sze-ho, a consultant at the hospital's department of medicine and geriatrics.

Patients pay around HK$1,100 to HK$1,300 a month for home treatment, with the remaining costs borne by the authority. Dialysis machines have been donated by the Kidney Foundation and the Jockey Club.

Wong said eligible patients are required to undergo training for around three months to learn how to place needles in their arm and operate the machine alone.

"They have to be young and physically stable … The home environment must be hygienic, too," Wong said.

Yeung Wai-lin, 50, has been suffering from polycystic kidney disease for four years and has been receiving haemodialysis in hospitals. She was one of the first patients trained for the home procedure and is expected to begin treatment in September.

"I can conduct the procedures for several nights at home and then go travelling for a couple of days. I would like to visit Japan," said Yeung, who currently has to visit hospitals twice a week. She has spent around HK$30,000 renovating her flat to prepare it for home treatment.

Demand for treatment for renal failure has been growing in the Kowloon East group of hospitals. There are now 190 haemodialysis patients and 530 receiving peritoneal dialysis - another treatment for kidney failure - including 20 severe cases that might need haemodialysis later.

Hospitals in the cluster will train another 10 patients next year in the home procedure. The quota for haemodialysis in hospitals is 99 after being increased by two this year.

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Preventing Diabetic Kidney Disease - Renal and Urology News PDF Print
August 11, 2015 Preventing Diabetic Kidney Disease - Renal and Urology News
A multidisciplinary team-based approach to diabetes management may help prevent complications like diabetic kidney disease.

NEW ORLEANS — Identifying early complications and emphasizing education and prevention may significantly help prevent kidney disease in patients with diabetes. In addition, new therapies focusing on repairing damaged tissue and innovative forms of renal replacement may help lower morbidity and mortality.

“Diabetes is a very complex disease process that affects the entire person. The management of a patient living with diabetes requires constant communication between members of the team and constant communication with the patient,” said Edward Barnes, MD, who is Chief of the Division of Nephrology and Hypertension at Western University of Health Sciences in Pomona, California.  

“As a nephrologist that practices within a multidisciplinary clinic for diabetes, I have found that as we identify patients early who are at risk of developing diabetic kidney disease, the communication and education between members of the team and translating that into communication to the patient has been the most impactful part of our practice.”

Barnes presented an overview on the latest approaches to preventing and treating diabetic kidney disease at AADE 2015, the annual meeting of the American Association of Diabetes Educators. Early education can lead to disease prevention, he said, and controlling blood pressure (BP) is vital. 

However, just managing blood sugars and BP is not enough, according to Barnes. He said there must also be a team-based approach to address the various issues involved in diabetes management.

“The most novel part of what we at the Western Diabetes Institute offer as a multidisciplinary practice is a the comprehensive initial visit and the pairing of patients living with diabetes with our medical students to serve as health care coaches,” Barnes told Endocrinology Advisor

“Diabetes is a complex process that involves several disciplines, but through increased patient engagement, we won't only affect the outcomes of diabetic kidney disease; we can impact our patients' entire experience of living with diabetes.”

Focus on Prevention

Barnes said that endocrinologist need to make sure their patients with diabetes try to achieve an HbA1c of less than 7.0%, exercise most days of the week, achieve proper weight management and receive diabetes education and nutritional education. Patients with diabetes also need pharmacologic education as well as pharmacologic intervention.

However, it is well documented that patient adherence is a major issues, and a lack of compliance is a leading contributor to high morbidity rates. Therefore, clinicians should be proactive in addressing patient adherence, he said, adding that, in this patient population, BP levels should be lower than 130/80 mm Hg and LDL cholesterol levels should be less than 100 mg/dL.

“Our goal should be to increase the value of diabetes care by increasing quality and decreasing the long-term cost of care,” said Barnes.

Significant improvements in clinical outcomes can be accomplished through a team approach and by focusing on prevention rather than strictly disease management, he noted.

New Detection Methods, Novel Treatments

Barnes also said clinicians now have evidence-based medicine to guide their treatment decisions as well as novel therapies.

New experimental candidate markers for early detection are now under investigation and show great promise in preventing disease progression. These include kidney injury molecule-1 (KIM-1), neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL) and proteomics. 

KIM-1 is one of the most highly induced proteins in the kidney after injury, and it is expressed at the luminal side of proximal tubules in areas with fibrosis and inflammation. Barnes explained that urinary KIM-1 levels increase with declining glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and elevated urinary KIM-1 levels were associated with a 5.1-fold increased risk for kidney transplant loss. 

He said large long-term studies are now underway to confirm the utility of KIM-1 in the chronic kidney disease (CKD) setting.

NGAL is a 25-kDa protein covalently bound to gelatinase from neutrophils, and expression is markedly induced in injured epithelia. Both urine and serum NGAL appear to be powerful independent predictors of acute kidney injury.

However, while both NGAL and KIM-1 are promising biomarkers, the studies so far have been small, Barnes said.

Proteomics, which involves identifying proteins in the body and determining their role in physiological and pathophysiological functions, also shows potential, according to Barnes. He said selected targeted therapies such as endothelin receptor antagonists and advanced glycosylated end-product inhibitors may also change how renal disease is managed in the coming years.

Endothelin-1 (ET-1) levels are elevated in urine/plasma in patients with diabetes, and ET-1 levels correlate with renal function, BP and albuminuria.

Source

  1. Barnes E. W28 – Diabetic Kidney Disease. Presented at: AADE 2015; Aug. 5-8, 2015; New Orleans.

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Variation in Dialysis Facility Referral for Kidney Transplantation Among ... - JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association PDF Print
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association
Importance Dialysis facilities in the United States are required to educate patients with end-stage renal disease about all treatment options, including kidney transplantation. Patients receiving dialysis typically require a referral for kidney ...
Georgia dialysis facility referral rate for kidney transplants is low and variable Medical Xpress
Public Release: 11-Aug-2015 Study finds low rate of dialysis facility referral

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Public Release: 11-Aug-2015 Study finds low rate of dialysis facility referral ... - EurekAlert (press release) PDF Print

Only about one in four patients with end-stage renal disease in Georgia were referred for kidney transplant evaluation within 1 year of starting dialysis between 2005 and 2011, although there was substantial variability in referral among dialysis facilities, according to a study in the August 11 issue of JAMA.

For most of the more than 600,000 patients in the United States with end-stage renal disease (ESRD), kidney transplantation represents the optimal treatment, providing longer survival, better quality of life, and substantial cost savings compared with dialysis. Dialysis facilities in the United States are required to educate patients with ESRD about all treatment options, including kidney transplantation. Patients receiving dialysis typically require a referral for kidney transplant evaluation at a transplant center to begin the transplantation process, but the proportion of dialysis patients referred for transplantation has been unknown, according to background information in the article.

Rachel E. Patzer, Ph.D., M.P.H., of the Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, and colleagues examined variation in dialysis facility-level referral for kidney transplant evaluation and factors associated with referral among patients initiating dialysis in Georgia, the U.S. state with the lowest kidney transplantation rates. The study included data from the United States Renal Data System for 15,279 adult (18-69 years) patients with ESRD from 308 Georgia dialysis facilities from January 2005 to September 2011, followed up through September 2012, and linked to kidney transplant referral data collected from adult transplant centers in Georgia in the same period.

The median within-facility percentage of patients referred within 1 year of starting dialysis at 308 Georgia dialysis facilities was 24 percent. There were 15 facilities (5 percent) that referred zero patients within 1 year of starting dialysis; the maximum referral in a year was 75 percent. Facilities in the lowest tertile of referral (31 percent).

Factors associated with lower referral for transplantation, such as white race, older age, and nonprofit facility status, were not necessarily the same as those associated with lower waitlisting, the researchers write. "Results of this study suggest that referral for transplantation among Georgia dialysis facilities is not uniform and that national surveillance data measuring waitlisting and transplantation, but not referral, may be inadequate to assess and intervene on disparities in access to kidney transplantation."

"These findings may have implications for health policy makers, researchers, clinicians, and patients. Low facility-level referral for transplantation, as well as the variability in referral across Georgia facilities, suggests that standardized guidelines are needed for the content and duration of a patient-clinician educational discussion regarding treatment options at start of dialysis. Socioeconomic status factors were significant barriers to both referral and waitlisting in this study; national policies, such as Medicaid expansion, could help to alleviate disparities," the authors write.

"Researchers should continue to develop, test, and implement pragmatic interventions to improve knowledge of transplantation among both clinicians and patients. In Georgia, such interventions could focus on those dialysis facilities with the lowest proportions of patients with ESRD referred for kidney transplantation."

(doi:10.1001/jama.2015.8897; Available pre-embargo to the media at http://media.jamanetwork.com)

Editor's Note: This work was supported by a National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities grant. Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, financial disclosures, etc.

Editorial: Improving Access to Kidney Transplantation

"In summary, this important report by Patzer et al has established that major barriers in access to transplantation exist even after a patient has been referred to a transplant center, with 80 percent of referred patients not joining the transplant waitlist within 1 year of referral," writes Dorry L. Segev, M.D., Ph.D., and colleagues with the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, in an accompanying editorial.

"Furthermore, the initial rates of referral were likely low and varied widely between dialysis centers, suggesting that some facilities may have been underreferring patients. Future research to better understand and target post-referral barriers, as well as interventions to identify and improve referral rates in the context of comprehensive transplant education, will be crucial for improving access to kidney transplantation for patients with ESRD."

(doi:10.1001/jama.2015.8932; Available pre-embargo to the media at http://media.jamanetwork.com)

Editor's Note: The authors are supported, in part, by grants from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases of the National Institutes of Health. All authors have completed and submitted the ICMJE Form for Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest and none were reported.

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Georgia dialysis facility referral rate for kidney transplants is low and variable - Medical Xpress PDF Print

Although kidney transplantation is known to be the optimal treatment for most patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD), only about one in four patients with ESRD in Georgia was referred by a dialysis facility to a transplant center for evaluation within one year of starting dialysis, according to a new study. In addition, there was substantial variation in the percentage of referrals among dialysis facilities.

The study of patients in Georgia dialysis facilities between 2005 and 2011 was led by Rachel Patzer, PhD, MPH, assistant professor of surgery in Emory University School of Medicine and Rollins School of Public Health. It will be published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA).

For the majority of the more than 600,000 patients in the US who have ESRD, offers longer survival, better quality of life and lower costs compared to the alternative treatment of dialysis.

"Georgia has the lowest rates of any state in the nation, and our research team wanted to find out whether this low rate was related to how dialysis centers refer patients to transplant centers," says Patzer.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) requires U.S. dialysis facilities to educate patients with ESRD about all treatment options, including transplantation, and referral to a transplant center to start the transplant medical evaluation is the next step to initiate the process.

The researchers analyzed data from 15,279 adult patients with ESRD at 308 Georgia dialysis facilities from January 2005 to September 2011, followed through September 2012. They linked those data to referrals received by the three kidney transplant centers in Georgia and wait-listing of patients for transplant.

The median within-facility percentage of patients referred by the dialysis centers within one year of starting dialysis was 24.4 percent, but the percentage referred varied between zero patients and 75 percent of patients. Facilities with the lowest percentage of referrals were more likely to treat patients living in high-poverty neighborhoods, had a higher patient-to-social worker ratio, and were more likely to be nonprofit compared to the facilities with the highest percentage of referrals.

Factors associated with a lower percentage of referrals for transplant also included older age and white race, but these factors were not always the same as those associated with lower rates of waitlisting.

"Variability in dialysis facility referral may be contributing to the inequities in access to kidney transplantation that we and others have already found," says Patzer. "Our study shows the need to analyze all the steps leading to kidney transplant in order to determine the reasons for low rates of transplant as well as disparities. For example, we found that black patients were referred for evaluation more often than white patients, but that a greater percentage of white patients were waitlisted after referral. There may be a variety of reasons for this difference, but without data on dialysis facility referrals, we might have concluded that these disparities began during the referral stage."

The study notes that referrals may be limited by the fact that nephrologists and dialysis facility staff are unsure about which patients to refer for transplantation, and dialysis professionals may need more guidance about appropriate referrals. Despite the CMS requirement that dialysis facilities educate their patients about transplantation and track referrals, other studies have found that nationally, fewer than 50 percent of nephrologists have a detailed discussion about transplantation with their patients and only 33 percent of patients are informed about transplant options when they begin dialysis.

The authors believe their findings may have implications for health policy makers, researchers, clinicians and patients. The low percentage of facility referrals and variability across Georgia suggests that standardized guidelines and national policies are needed for patient education regarding treatment options when dialysis begins.

"Researchers should continue to develop, test and implement interventions to improve knowledge about transplantation among clinicians and patients," they say, with a special focus on dialysis facilities with the lowest percentage of patients with ESRD referred for kidney transplantation.

"Interventions are important in the Southeastern U.S., where we have the lowest access to kidney transplantation in the nation," Patzer says.

However, there are no national data on referral. Patzer noted that it was only due to the collaboration of all of the transplant centers in the state through their Southeastern Kidney Transplant Coalition partnership that these data were able to be studied in Georgia.

"Our data emphasize the importance of measuring referral for transplantation to capture its variability both within and between regions," say the authors. "Because we found that factors associated with referral and waitlisting may differ, it is important to highlight possible discrepancies between dialysis facilities' perceptions of appropriate referrals and the reality of which are actually waitlisted and undergo transplantation in practice. National data collection on referral is needed to examine whether findings in Georgia are generalizable to other regions of the country."

Explore further: Racial disparities exist in access to kidney transplantation

More information: JAMA, doi:10.1001/jama.2015.8897
JAMA, doi:10.1001/jama.2015.8932

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