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2.
Kidney Int Rep ; 9(5): 1298-1309, 2024 May.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38707811

Introduction: People receiving peritoneal dialysis experience physical function decline, impairing their ability to complete everyday activities, leading to poorer quality of life. Physical factors, including cardiorespiratory fitness, muscle strength, physical activity, and sedentary behavior are associated with physical function. However, little is known about this relationship, or temporal changes of these factors in this cohort. This study aimed to explore modifiable physical factors that are associated with physical function, identify which factor has the strongest influence, and explore temporal changes. Methods: Adults receiving peritoneal dialysis underwent objective and self-reported physical function, cardiorespiratory fitness, muscle strength, physical activity and sedentary behavior assessments 3 times over a 12-month observation period (at baseline, 6 months, and 12 months). Results: Eighty-two participants underwent assessments. All modifiable physical factors were predominantly moderate to strongly associated with physical function at baseline. Cardiorespiratory fitness had the strongest and most consistent influence with every meter conferring a 0.08-unit (P < 0.01) and 0.01-unit (P < 0.05) increase in self-report and objective physical function score, respectively. Temporal changes were observed for modifiable physical factors with significant mean changes in cardiorespiratory fitness (-9.8%), quadricep strength (-5%), moderate-to-vigorous (-25.9%) and total (-16.2%) physical activity, and sedentary behavior (+7.1%). Conclusion: The results of this study indicate that cardiorespiratory fitness could be routinely monitored to detect risk of physical function decline and targeted through intervention to enhance physical function for people receiving peritoneal dialysis. Nevertheless, all factors should be considered when designing interventions to mitigate temporal changes and induce the numerous health benefits offered by being physically active.

3.
Kidney Int Rep ; 9(3): 601-610, 2024 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38481501

Introduction: Fatigue is a frequent and debilitating symptom that contributes to poor quality of life for people receiving peritoneal dialysis. Ecological momentary assessment using mobile technology (mEMA) is a novel survey technique that can collect symptom data in real-time and has not been trialed in a peritoneal dialysis cohort. The study aimed to explore real-time fluctuations and associations between fatigue, mood, and physical activity using mEMA. Methods: Adults receiving peritoneal dialysis completed fatigue and mood scales, via a mobile application (app), 5 times daily for 7 days and, concurrently wore an accelerometer. A feasibility questionnaire was completed on the eighth day. Results: Forty-eight adults completed the study. Within-day fatigue fluctuations were observed with severity lowest during mid-morning to early afternoon and peaking at bedtime. Associations between fatigue and mood were observed with a 1-unit change in mood score conferring a 5.2-unit change in fatigue (P < 0.01). Higher volume of physical activity was associated with lower fatigue and enhanced mood. Overall adherence to the app-based surveys was 73% with most participants reporting mobile phones and the mEMA app being easy to use. Conclusion: People receiving peritoneal dialysis experience within day and day-to-day fluctuations in fatigue that appear highly variable. Higher fatigue severity was associated with poorer mood and lower physical activity levels with future studies required to explore if physical activity-based interventions could be a potential strategy for the management of these symptoms. Furthermore, mEMA, and mobile phones, were feasible to capture symptom data with potential to be employed in future research or, as part of improved care.

4.
J Nephrol ; 37(2): 343-352, 2024 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38345687

BACKGROUND: Patient activation refers to the knowledge, confidence and skills required for the management of chronic disease and is antecedent to self-management. Greater self-management in chronic kidney disease (CKD) results in improved patient experience and patient outcomes. AIM: To examine patient activation levels in people with CKD stage 5 pre-dialysis and determine associations with sociodemographic characteristics, treatment adherence and healthcare utilisation. METHODS/DESIGN: People with CKD stage 5 not receiving dialysis from one Australian kidney care service. Patient activation was measured using the 13-item Patient Activation Measure (PAM-13). Sociodemographic and clinical outcome data (emergency department visits, admissions) were collected from medical records. Morisky Medication Adherence Scale was used to determine self-report medication adherence. RESULTS: Two hundred and four participants completed the study. The mean PAM-13 score was 53.4 (SD 13.8), with 73% reporting low activation levels (1 and 2). Patient activation scores significantly decreased with increased age (P < 0.001) and significantly increased with higher educational levels (P < 0.001). Higher patient activation level was associated with fewer hospital emergency department visits (P = 0.03) and increased medication adherence (P < 0.001). CONCLUSION: Patient activation levels are low in people with CKD stage 5 not receiving dialysis suggesting limited ability for self-management and capacity for optimally informed decisions about their healthcare. Efforts to improve patient activation need to consider age and education level.


Medication Adherence , Patient Participation , Renal Insufficiency, Chronic , Humans , Cross-Sectional Studies , Male , Female , Middle Aged , Aged , Medication Adherence/statistics & numerical data , Renal Insufficiency, Chronic/therapy , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Emergency Service, Hospital/statistics & numerical data , Adult , Self-Management , Aged, 80 and over , Educational Status , Age Factors , Self Care , Severity of Illness Index
6.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38285469

Pregnancy is an important goal for many women with CKD or kidney failure, but important barriers exist, particularly as CKD stage progresses. Women with advanced CKD often have a limited fertility window and may miss their opportunity for a pregnancy if advised to defer until after kidney transplantation. Pregnancy rates in women with advanced kidney failure or receiving dialysis remain low, and despite the improved outcomes in recent years, these pregnancies remain high risk for both mother and baby with high rates of preterm birth due to both maternal and fetal complications. However, with increased experience and advances in models of care, this paradigm may be changing. Intensive hemodialysis regimens have been shown to improve both fertility and live birth rates. Increasing dialysis intensity and individualizing dialysis prescription to residual renal function, to achieve highly efficient clearances, has resulted in improved live birth rates, longer gestations, and higher birth weights. Intensive hemodialysis regimens, particularly nocturnal and home-based dialysis, are therefore a potential option for women with kidney failure desiring pregnancy. Global initiatives for the promotion and uptake of home-based dialysis are gaining momentum and may have advantages in this unique patient population. In this article, we review the epidemiology and outcomes of pregnancy in hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis recipients. We discuss the role home-based therapies may play in helping women achieve more successful pregnancies and outline the principles and practicalities of management of dialysis in pregnancy with a focus on delivery of home modalities. The experience and perspectives of a patient are also shared.

7.
Ther Drug Monit ; 46(1): 49-56, 2024 02 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38193880

BACKGROUND: Whole-blood therapeutic drug monitoring of tacrolimus is conducted to maintain tacrolimus concentrations within a safe and effective range. Changes in hematocrit cause variability in blood concentrations of tacrolimus because it is highly bound to erythrocytes. Measuring plasma concentrations may eliminate this variability; however, current methods have limitations owing to the use of cross-reactive immunoassays, plasma separation at nonbiological temperatures, and lack of clinical validation. This study aimed to develop and validate a clinically applicable method to measure plasma tacrolimus concentrations in renal transplant recipients and to examine the concentration differences between genotypic CYP3A5 expressors and nonexpressors. METHODS: Plasma tacrolimus concentrations were measured in 9 stable renal transplant recipients who were genotypic CYP3A5 expressors or nonexpressors. Tacrolimus was extracted from plasma using solid-phase extraction, and liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry was used for detection and quantitation. RESULTS: This assay was sensitive, selective, and linear between 100 and 5000 ng/L, with intraassay and interassay imprecision and inaccuracy <10% and <5% respectively. The extraction recovery of tacrolimus and ascomycin was 74%. Matrix ion suppression effects were 31.5% and 35% with overall recovery of 50.6% and 48.3% for tacrolimus and ascomycin, respectively. Whole-blood concentrations accounted for approximately 46% of the variation in plasma concentrations in CYP3A5 expressors and nonexpressors. No difference in dose-adjusted whole-blood and plasma concentrations was observed between CYP3A5 expressors and nonexpressors. CONCLUSIONS: This assay is clinically applicable with excellent performance and demonstrated that tacrolimus plasma concentrations highly correlated with whole-blood concentrations.


Kidney Transplantation , Liquid Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry , Humans , Chromatography, Liquid , Cytochrome P-450 CYP3A/genetics , Tacrolimus , Tandem Mass Spectrometry
8.
Kidney Int Rep ; 8(12): 2802-2813, 2023 Dec.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38106594

Introduction: The experiences and information needs for reproductive health counseling in women with chronic kidney disease (CKD) are poorly defined, despite the known importance of pregnancy planning in this higher-risk cohort. Methods: Australian adult women with CKD and their partners or family members completed a consumer codesigned survey about experiences of and preferences for pregnancy-related counseling, support, and education. Data were analyzed descriptively and with qualitative content analysis of free-text responses. Results: Responses were received from 102 women (CKD, n = 60; dialysis, n = 11; transplant, n = 26; unsure, n = 5 ) and 17 partners/family members. Pregnancy-related discussions were initiated mostly by women themselves (60.0%) compared to nephrologists (26.7%), and only after conception in 14.7%. Women found pregnancy-related discussions satisfactory (68.0%) and useful (50.7%) but also stressful (66.7%), with only 54.7% feeling in control of decision-making. Information deficits and quality, preformed decisions, clinician-patient disconnect, and burden of decision-making contributed to usefulness and outcomes of pregnancy-related counseling. Women received insufficient information about contraception (not provided in 35.2% of cases), medication safety (40.9%), fetal complications (33.8%) and emotional and psychological impact of pregnancy (73.2%). Women preferred counseling from nephrologists (86.4%), face-to-face settings (79.6%), websites (72.7%), handouts (61.4%), and online support groups (46.6%). High-quality, multiformat information by content experts, peer support, and psychological support were also strongly desired. Conclusion: This study highlights that preconception counseling and information needs of women with CKD are currently not being met. Frameworks and tools to assist patients and clinicians, particularly nephrologists, to initiate and conduct sensitive, useful, and informed shared decision-making (SDM) about pregnancy are urgently needed.

9.
Kidney Int Rep ; 8(12): 2625-2634, 2023 Dec.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38106606

Introduction: Needle-related distress is common among people receiving hemodialysis and affects quality of life and treatment decisions, yet little evidence exists to guide management. This study explored patients' experiences of needle-related distress to inform the development of prevention, identification, and management strategies. Methods: Semistructured interviews concerning dialysis cannulation, needle-related distress, and potential solutions were conducted with people with current or recent experience of hemodialysis (N = 15) from a tertiary hospital-based service. Interviews ceased at thematic saturation. Transcripts were analyzed thematically. Results: There were 4 themes and 11 subthemes generated: (i) uncovering a hidden source of distress (dismissal and minimization by others; suffering in silence to stay alive; preparation, assessment, and education); (ii) coping with cannulation pain and trauma (interaction between physical damage, pain, and distress; operator dependency-the importance of nurse skill and technique); (iii) the environment created by dialysis nurses (emotional transference; communication during cannulation; valuing empathy and person-centered care; a psychosocially supportive dialysis unit); and (iv) supporting patient self-management of distress (accessing tools to help themselves; distraction to reduce distress). Conclusion: Needle-related distress is an often-hidden element of the hemodialysis experience. Patients learn to tolerate it as an inevitable part of dialysis for survival. Nurses' technical skills and the dialysis environment they create are key determinants of the patient cannulation experience. Proposed solutions include psychological screening, education for patients to self-manage distress, and training for nurses in communication and providing relevant psychological support.

10.
J Ren Nutr ; 2023 Dec 20.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38128852

OBJECTIVE: People receiving peritoneal dialysis may receive health benefits from physical activity or exercise. However, on-going uncertainty and fear regarding safety may result in this population missing out on the health benefits of participation. The aim of this study was to explore the characteristics and frequency of physical activity and/or exercise-related side effects (e.g., symptoms such as pain or shortness of breath) and negative health events (e.g., stroke or hyper/hypoglycemia) experienced by people receiving peritoneal dialysis. METHODS: An international online survey involving adults receiving peritoneal dialysis was conducted with questions related to nature, occurrence, and impact of side effects and/or negative health events experienced during or soon after participation in physical activity or exercise. RESULTS: Fifty-two people completed the survey reporting 151 side effects that were related to physical activity and exercise and 67 that were possibly related. Fatigue (58% of respondents), muscle/joint soreness or pain (54%), and dizziness (43%) were the most frequently reported side-effect types. The majority occurred occasionally (58% of all side effects), if not rarely (24%) and participation in on-going physical activity or exercise was typically prevented only occasionally (39%) or not at all (31%). Side effects were mainly self-managed (54% of all side effects) or did not require treatment (19%) and had low (38%) or no effect (30%) on ability to do daily activities. CONCLUSIONS: People receiving peritoneal dialysis generally experience side effects that can be considered a normal response to physical activity or exercise engagement. Furthermore, the risk of serious or peritoneal dialysis-specific side effects as a result of physical activity or exercise appears to be low. The results add to the emerging evidence suggesting physical activity and exercise appear to be safe for people receiving peritoneal dialysis.

11.
J Ren Care ; 2023 Nov 17.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37975628

BACKGROUND: A key skill of nephrology nursing is cannulation of patients receiving haemodialysis. Traumatic and unsuccessful cannulation experiences, particularly in the initial weeks of haemodialysis, may contribute to the onset of needle distress for patients. OBJECTIVES: To identify the key knowledge, skills and attitudes of nephrology nurses working with haemodialysis patients and the competencies relevant to nephrology nursing working with patients with needle-related distress. DESIGN: A qualitative study involving semistructured interviews. Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed and deductive, and inductive thematic analysis applied. PARTICIPANTS: Nephrology nurses (n = 17) were interviewed from a tertiary kidney service in South Australia. Nurses had varying roles and years of experience (range 1-30 years) working with dialysis patients within the service. RESULTS: Two overarching themes, (1) Flexibility in Practice and Care and (2) Responsibility of Nephrology Nursing, were identified as relevant across all knowledge, skills and attitudes of nephrology nurses working with patients with needle-related distress. Thirty-six knowledge, skills and attitudes were identified; 12 related to knowledge, 14 related to skills and 10 were identified as attitudes and were summarised under seven broad competencies. CONCLUSION: This study identifies potential knowledge, skills and attitudes and competencies required for nephrology nurses working with patients with needle-related distress. It highlights strategies that may prevent the onset and worsening of needle-related distress, as well as reduce it. It also brings to light that nurses desire additional education regarding strategies to improve the patient experience of cannulation and nurse confidence and skill in this area.

12.
BMC Nephrol ; 24(1): 345, 2023 11 22.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37993776

BACKGROUND: Patients with kidney failure on hemodialysis (HD) experience considerable symptom burden and poor health-related quality of life (HRQoL). There is limited use of patient reported outcome measures (PROMs) in facility HD units to direct immediate care, with response rates in other studies between 36 to 70%. The aim of this pilot study was to evaluate feasibility of electronic PROMs (e-PROMs) in HD participants, with feedback 3-monthly to the participants' treating team, for severe or worsening symptoms as identified by the Integrated Palliative Outcome Scale (IPOS-Renal), with linkage to the Australian and New Zealand Dialysis and Transplant (ANZDATA) registry, compared with usual care. METHODS: This is a registry-based cluster-randomized controlled pilot trial involving all adults receiving HD in 4 satellite units in Australia over a 6-month period. HD units were cluster randomized 1:1 to the control (HRQoL data collection only) or intervention arm (symptom monitoring with feedback to treating team every 3 months). Feasibility was assessed by participant response rate (percentage of eligible HD participants, including new incident participants, who completed the questionnaire at each time point); retention rate (percentage of participants who completed the baseline questionnaire and all subsequent measures); and completion time. HRQoL and symptom burden scores are described. RESULTS: There were 226 unique participants who completed the e-PROMs (mean age 62 years, 69% males, 78% White-European, median dialysis vintage 1.62 years). At 6 months, response rate and retention rate for the intervention arm were 54% and 68%, respectively, and 89% and 97% in the control arm. Median time to complete IPOS-Renal was 6.6 min (5.3, 10.1) at 3 months, and when combined with the outcome measure (EQ-5D-5L), the median time was 9.4 min (6.9, 13.6) at 6 months. CONCLUSIONS: Electronic symptom monitoring among HD participants with feedback to clinicians is feasible. Variations in response and retention rates could be potentially explained by the lengthier questionnaire, and higher frequency of data collection time points for participants in the intervention arm. A definitive national RCT is underway. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ACTRN12618001976279 (07/12/2018).


Quality of Life , Renal Dialysis , Male , Humans , Adult , Middle Aged , Female , Pilot Projects , Feedback , Feasibility Studies , Australia/epidemiology , Registries
13.
Nephrol Nurs J ; 50(5): 423-428, 2023.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37983551

Nephrology nurses struggle to support patients on hemodialysis who experience needle fear due to absence of adequate programs or guidelines. Therefore, we have designed an educational intervention for nurses to learn techniques and strategies to support patients with needle fear and review best cannulation practices with minimal trauma to improve patients' experience of dialysis. A pre-post design measured self-reported confidence in nurses' ability to support patients on dialysis who have a fear of needles. We found nurses can benefit from targeted educational interventions that provide information and strategies regarding needle fear management. Findings from this study have a potential to be transferred to other chronic disease settings with frequent needle use.


Nephrology Nursing , Nephrology , Nurses , Humans , Renal Dialysis , Fear , Catheterization
15.
Pathology ; 55(7): 974-978, 2023 Dec.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37659910

Pregnancies after kidney transplantation are high-risk. Whilst previous studies have explored pregnancy outcomes, there are no existing data on the placental histopathology findings of kidney transplant recipients and how these correlate with clinical outcomes. From 1976 to 2020, 62 pregnancies to 37 transplant recipients were identified in a South Australian clinical unit. The medical records were evaluated to identify if placental tissue had been sent for histopathology. The histology was reviewed contemporaneously, blinded to outcomes, following the Amsterdam consensus. The findings were correlated with the clinical data. Placental tissue was referred for histopathological examination in 20 pregnancies to 15 women. A high rate of adverse perinatal outcomes was noted, with fetal growth restriction (FGR; n=6), pre-eclampsia (n=8), worsening renal function with >10% increase in serum creatinine from preconception (n=9), pre-term birth (n=15), and antenatal hypertension (n=12). Maternal vascular malperfusion was seen in 14/20 pregnancies, including in all cases with pre-eclampsia, and was commonly observed with FGR (5/6 cases), decline in kidney function (8/9), antenatal hypertension (7/12) and preterm birth (12/15). In this high-risk population, increased obstetric ultrasound scans with uterine and umbilical Doppler should be considered to monitor and manage maternal uteroplacental vascular perfusion. We recommend all placental tissue from transplant recipients be referred for histopathological examination.


Hypertension , Kidney Transplantation , Pre-Eclampsia , Premature Birth , Pregnancy , Female , Infant, Newborn , Humans , Placenta/pathology , Pre-Eclampsia/diagnosis , Pre-Eclampsia/pathology , Kidney Transplantation/adverse effects , Transplant Recipients , Australia , Pregnancy Outcome , Fetal Growth Retardation/diagnosis , Fetal Growth Retardation/epidemiology , Hypertension/pathology
16.
J Nephrol ; 36(7): 2023-2035, 2023 09.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37632667

BACKGROUND: Clinicians and patients have reported fragmentation in the primary and tertiary healthcare interface. However, perspectives of service navigation and the impacts of fragmentation are not well defined, particularly for patients transitioning to dialysis. This study aimed to define patient perspectives of the functioning of the health service interface and impacts on healthcare experiences and engagement, informing patient-centred and outcomes-focused service models. METHODS: A qualitative study was conducted through semi-structured interviews with 25 dialysis patients (16 males) aged 34-78 receiving dialysis across a multi-site tertiary service. Transcripts were analysed thematically. RESULTS: Three main themes were identified: (1) The Changing Nature of General Practitioner (GP) Patient Relationships; (2) Ownership and Leadership in Kidney Care; and (3) The Importance of Nephrologist-GP Communications. Patients perceived an unreliable primary-tertiary service interface which lacked coordinated care and created challenges for primary care continuity. These impacted perceptions of healthcare provider expertise and confidence in healthcare systems. Patients subsequently increased the healthcare sought from tertiary kidney clinicians. The fractured interface led some to coordinate communication between health sectors, to support care quality, but this caused additional stress. CONCLUSIONS: A fragmented primary-tertiary healthcare interface creates challenges for patient service navigation and can negatively impact patient experiences, leading to primary care disengagement, reduced confidence in health care quality and increased stress. Future studies are imperative for assessing initiatives facilitating health system integration, including communication technologies, healthcare provider training, patient empowerment, and specific outcomes in health, economic and patient experience measures, for patients transitioning to dialysis.


Delivery of Health Care , Renal Insufficiency , Male , Humans , Tertiary Healthcare , Qualitative Research , Primary Health Care
17.
J Nephrol ; 36(7): 2125-2131, 2023 09.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37556051

BACKGROUND: Parenthood data has been collected by the Australia and New Zealand Dialysis and Transplant Registry (ANZDATA) since its inception in 1968, with a specific parenthood survey since 2001 of core maternal and fetal outcomes, which was further expanded in 2017 to collect additional obstetric and clinical data. We evaluated the parenthood dataset completeness over the evolution of the surveys. METHODS: Descriptive statistics were used to quantify the completeness of data reported for male and female patients receiving KRT between 1963 and 2021 and compare parenthood surveys over time. RESULTS: Core data items consistently had more than 85% completeness rates for all survey iterations. Most data items introduced in 2018 had less than 85% completeness. Of these, drug therapy during pregnancy, common medical complications, and labour and delivery data items had the highest completeness (70-85%), whereas dialysis-related items had a wide range of completeness, ranging from 44 to 80%. CONCLUSION: Our findings underpin the robustness of the ANZDATA parenthood dataset but also highlight that more detailed clinical data can be difficult to capture, despite enabling better understanding of drivers of outcomes and risk stratification in this high-risk cohort. To overcome current limitations, strategies must be implemented to augment data completeness.


Kidney Failure, Chronic , Kidney Transplantation , Renal Insufficiency , Humans , Male , Female , Renal Dialysis , Registries
18.
J Periodontal Res ; 58(5): 874-892, 2023 Oct.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37477165

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) and poor oral health are inter-related and their significant impact on each other is well established in the literature. Many systematic reviews and meta-analyses have demonstrated a strong relationship between CKD and periodontitis, where periodontal treatment has shown potential in improving CKD outcomes. However, the quality of the studies and heterogeneity of the results show variation. The aim of this umbrella review was to review the quality of the current systematic reviews on the relationship between CKD and oral health with an emphasis on periodontal disease and to generate clinically relevant guidelines to maintain periodontal health in patients with CKD. This umbrella review was conducted and reported in alignment with the Joanna Briggs Institute and the PRISMA 2020 guidelines. The review protocol was established prior to commencing the review and registered on JBI and PROSPERO (CRD42022335209). Search strings were established for PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, and Dentistry & Oral Science Source up to April 2022. All systematic reviews and meta-analyses that considered the relationship between CKD and periodontitis or periodontal treatment were included. Of 371 studies identified through the systematic search, 18 systematic reviews met the inclusion criteria. Ten studies assessed the relationship between oral health status and CKD with a focus on periodontitis and CKD, five reviewed the impact of periodontal treatment on CKD outcomes, two included both relationship and effectiveness of periodontal treatment and one qualitatively reviewed oral health-related quality of life in patients with kidney failure. Findings indicate there is a bidirectional relationship between CKD and periodontal disease. In view of the heterogeneity of the existing literature on CKD and periodontal disease, specific recommendations for the management of periodontitis among patients with CKD are proposed for medical professionals, dental professionals, and aged care workers based on the evidence collated in this review.


Periodontal Diseases , Periodontitis , Renal Insufficiency, Chronic , Aged , Humans , Oral Health , Periodontal Diseases/complications , Periodontal Diseases/therapy , Periodontitis/therapy , Quality of Life , Renal Insufficiency, Chronic/complications , Systematic Reviews as Topic , Meta-Analysis as Topic
20.
Aust Health Rev ; 47(3): 362-368, 2023 Jun.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37188536

Objectives To project the prevalence of people receiving dialysis in Australia for 2021-30 to inform service planning and health policy. Methods Estimates were based on data from 2011 to 2020 from the Australia & New Zealand Dialysis & Transplant (ANZDATA) Registry and the Australian Bureau of Statistics. We projected dialysis and functioning kidney transplant recipient populations for the years 2021-30. Discrete-time, non-homogenous Markov models were built on probabilities for transition between three mutually exclusive states (Dialysis, Functioning Transplant, Death), for five age groups. Two scenarios were employed - stable transplant rate vs a continued increase - to assess the impact of these scenarios on the projected prevalences. Results Models projected a 22.5-30.4% growth in the dialysis population from 14 554 in 2020 to 17 829 ('transplant growth') - 18 973 ('transplant stable') by 2030. An additional 4983-6484 kidney transplant recipients were also projected by 2030. Dialysis incidence per population increased and dialysis prevalence growth exceeded population ageing in 40-59 and 60-69 year age groups. The greatest dialysis prevalence growth was seen among those aged ≥70 years. Conclusion Modelling of the future prevalence of dialysis use highlights the increasing demand on services expected overall and especially by people aged ≥70 years. Appropriate funding and healthcare planning must meet this demand.


Kidney Failure, Chronic , Kidney Transplantation , Humans , Australia/epidemiology , Kidney Failure, Chronic/epidemiology , Kidney Failure, Chronic/therapy , New Zealand/epidemiology , Prevalence , Registries , Renal Dialysis
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