Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Haerani Rasyid
CNEMU 2018
Chronic Kidney Disease : Why??
1. The rapid increase in the prevalence and the enormous cost of
treatment
2. The discovery of effective measures to prevents its progression
3. An appreciation of its major role in increasing the risk CV
disease
4. Prevalent and clinically silent until its late stages, at which
point patients may suffer significant irreversible damage or
mortality
5. Recent data indicating that overt disease is the trip of an iceberg
of covert disease
But few are aware of it – even those
with eGFR less than 30
60
Having Weak of Failing Kidneys
Percent Report Being Aware of
50
40
Men
30
Women
20
10
0
eGFR of 30-59 eGFR of 15-29
50
40
30
20
10
0
Not Appropriately Tested Appropriately tested - no diagnosis Appropriately tested - accurate diagnosis
% of Patients
Szczech, Lynda A, et al. "Primary Care Detection of Chronic Kidney Disease in Adults with Type-
2 Diabetes: The ADD-CKD Study (Awareness, Detection and Drug Therapy in Type-2 Diabetes
and Chronic Kidney Disease)." PLOS One - In press (2014).
Individuals at increased risk for CKD should be
tested at the time of a health evaluations to determine if if they have CKD
• Diabetes
• Hypertension
• Autoimmune diseases
• Systemic infections
• Exposure to drugs or procedures associated with
acute decline in kidney function
• Recovery from acute kidney failure
• Age > 60 years
• Family history of kidney disease
• Reduced kidney mass (includes kidney donors and
transplant recipients)
Improved Diagnosis…
Studies demonstrate that clinician behavior changes
when CKD diagnosis improves. Significant
improvements realized in:
• Assessment of microalbuminuria/proteinuria
• GFR = Glomerular filtration rate
• Urinary sediment of urine dipstick for red
blood cells and white blood cells
1. Wei L, et al. Kidney Int. 2013;84:174-178.
2. Chan M, et al. Am J Med. 2007:120;1063-1070
Improved Diagnosis…
We can have an impact on progression of CKD
100
No Treatment
Current Treatment
Early Treatment
GFR (mL/min/1.732)
10
Kidney Failure
0
4 7 9 11
Time (years)
What can primary care providers do?
nutrition
management
management
Chronic
Chronic Malnutrition
Malnutrition
Dialysis
Dialysis Mortality
Mortality
Nutrition Management
Management .......
.......
Low Protein
• Malnutrition
SOLUTION
Maintenance
Maintenanceandand Adequate
Adequateandand
Reduction of
Improvement
Improvementofof Catabolism Appropriate
Appropriate
Nutritional
NutritionalStatus
Status Nutrient
NutrientSupply
Supply
- Prevent Malnutrition
- Delay CKD Progression
- Late initiation of dialysis
Studies of early versus late initiation of dialysis treatment in
CKD patients and in failed kidney transplant patients
Later is better!
Rev
Molnar et al., NatMolnar … Kalantar-Zadeh, Nature Rev Nephrol 2012 With Ketosteril
Nephrol, 2012
If later is better! Try low Protein + Ketoacids
eGRF Advanced Chronic Kidney Disease
25 EARLY Start
Dialysis
20 Higher muscle mass
Better nutritional status
Transplant
Less severe comorbidity Low
15 muscle
mass
10 LATE Start
Dialysis Worse
comorbid
5 Kidney Transplant states
Immunosuppression
Infections, urologicals Transplant
Transplant
Failing Allograft
25
Early Start
Greater 20 -Mix Poorer
Survival? 15 Case e
Rac Outcomes?
Late Start
10 .
Better 5 Lead Time? Survival?
Confounding
Outcomes?
by Indication?
Hemodynamic Instability
Causal Association? Loss of Residual Renal Function
↑Infection (access related, others)
Biologically Plausible? ↑ Protein Energy Wasting
Anxiety, psychosocial burden
Patient Safety
Following
CKD detection