Section of Nephrology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL.
Albany Medical College, Albany, NY.
Am J Kidney Dis. 2014 Sep;64(3):394-401. doi: 10.1053/j.ajkd.2014.03.018. Epub 2014 May 9.
World Kidney Day 2013 focused on raising awareness of the impact and consequences of acute kidney injury (AKI). Although many studies have examined rates of AKI in hospitalized patients, we were interested in the impact of AKI on the workload of nephrologists.
Cross-sectional forced-choice internet-based survey.
SETTING & PARTICIPANTS: 598 survey respondents who were US-based nephrologist members of the American Society of Nephrology.
Numbers of inpatients and outpatients seen on World Kidney Day 2013 for the management of AKI or other conditions (and specifically in-hospital renal replacement therapies [RRTs]), based on self-report of number/percentage of patients seen on World Kidney Day and in the prior year.
Of 598 physician respondents (response rate, 12%), 310 saw patients in the hospital on World Kidney Day. Of 3,285 patients seen by respondents, 1,500 were seen for AKI (46%); 1,233, for end-stage renal disease (37%); and 552, for non-AKI/end-stage renal disease-related problems (17%). Of patients with AKI, 688 (46%) were in the intensive care unit and 415 (28%) received RRT. Intermittent hemodialysis was performed in 315 patients (76%) who received RRT. Delivered dialysis dose was quantified in only 48 (15%) of those receiving intermittent hemodialysis. 260 respondents saw 2,380 patients in the ambulatory setting, of whom 207 (9%) were seen for follow-up of AKI.
There was a low response rate to the survey. Numbers of patients were self-reported.
This is the first physician survey examining the care of patients and impact of AKI on current in-hospital and ambulatory nephrology practices. In our sample, AKI was the most common reason for in-hospital nephrology consultation. Furthermore, our findings point to significant areas in which improvement is needed, including inadequate quantification of dialysis delivered dose. Finally, our survey highlights that AKI is a major public health issue.
2013 年世界肾脏日的重点是提高人们对急性肾损伤(AKI)的影响和后果的认识。尽管许多研究都检查了住院患者 AKI 的发生率,但我们对 AKI 对肾病医生工作量的影响感兴趣。
横断面强制性选择互联网调查。
598 名美国肾脏病学会的美国肾病医生在线调查回复者。
根据回复者报告的在世界肾脏日和前一年看到的患者人数/百分比,自我报告管理 AKI 或其他疾病(特别是院内肾脏替代疗法[RRT])的 2013 年世界肾脏日住院患者和门诊患者的数量。在 598 名医生回复者中(回复率为 12%),有 310 名医生在世界肾脏日当天在医院看诊。在 3285 名被调查者看诊的患者中,有 1500 名(46%)是因为 AKI,1233 名(37%)是因为终末期肾病,552 名(17%)是因为非 AKI/终末期肾病相关问题。在 AKI 患者中,有 688 名(46%)在重症监护病房,415 名(28%)接受了 RRT。接受 RRT 的患者中有 415 名(28%)接受了间歇性血液透析。在接受间歇性血液透析的患者中,只有 48 名(15%)患者的透析剂量被量化。260 名回复者在门诊看诊了 2380 名患者,其中 207 名(9%)是因为 AKI 的随访。
调查的回复率很低。患者人数是自我报告的。
这是首次对医生进行的调查,调查了患者的护理情况以及 AKI 对当前院内和门诊肾病实践的影响。在我们的样本中,AKI 是院内肾病咨询最常见的原因。此外,我们的研究结果指出了需要改进的重要领域,包括透析剂量的不足。最后,我们的调查突出表明 AKI 是一个主要的公共卫生问题。