Szczech Lynda A, Stewart Rebecca C, Su Hsu-Lin, DeLoskey Richard J, Astor Brad C, Fox Chester H, McCullough Peter A, Vassalotti Joseph A
Durham Nephrology Associates, Durham, North Carolina, United States of America.
Scientific Activities Department, The National Kidney Foundation, Inc., New York, New York, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Nov 26;9(11):e110535. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0110535. eCollection 2014.
This US, multicenter, observational study assessed the CKD prevalence in adult patients with type-2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and characterized the proportion of detected and undiagnosed CKD in the primary care setting using the following: a clinician survey; a patient physical exam and medical history; a single blood draw for estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) and glycosolated hemoglobin (HbA1c); urine dipstick for protein; urine albumin-creatinine ratio (ACR); two patient quality of life questionnaires; and a 15-month medical record review. The study consisted of 9339 adults with T2DM and 466 investigator sites. Of the 9339 enrolled, 9307 had complete data collection for analysis. The 15-month retrospective review showed urine protein, urine ACR, and eGFR testing were not performed in 51.4%, 52.9% and 15.2% of individuals, respectively. Of the 9307 patients, 5036 (54.1%) had Stage 1-5 CKD based on eGFR and albuminuria; however, only 607 (12.1%) of those patients were identified as having CKD by their clinicians. Clinicians were more successful in diagnosing patients with Stage 3-5 CKD than Stages 1 and 2. There were no differences in clinicians' likelihood of identification of CKD based on practice setting, number of years in practice, or self-reported patients seen per week. Awareness or patient self-reported CKD was 81.1% with practitioner detection versus 2.6% in the absence of diagnosis. Primary care of T2DM demonstrates recommended urine CKD testing is underutilized, and CKD is significantly under-diagnosed. This is the first study to show CKD detection is associated with awareness.
这项美国多中心观察性研究评估了2型糖尿病(T2DM)成年患者的慢性肾脏病(CKD)患病率,并通过以下方式确定了初级医疗环境中已检测出和未诊断出的CKD比例:临床医生调查;患者体格检查和病史;采集单次血样以测定估算肾小球滤过率(eGFR)和糖化血红蛋白(HbA1c);尿液试纸检测蛋白质;尿白蛋白-肌酐比值(ACR);两份患者生活质量问卷;以及为期15个月的病历回顾。该研究纳入了9339名患有T2DM的成年人和466个研究点。在纳入的9339人中,9307人有完整的数据用于分析。为期15个月的回顾性研究显示,分别有51.4%、52.9%和15.2%的个体未进行尿蛋白、尿ACR和eGFR检测。在9307名患者中,根据eGFR和蛋白尿情况,5036人(54.1%)患有1 - 5期CKD;然而,这些患者中只有607人(12.1%)被临床医生确诊患有CKD。临床医生对3 - 5期CKD患者的诊断比1期和2期患者更成功。临床医生识别CKD的可能性在不同的执业环境、执业年限或每周自我报告的看诊患者数量方面没有差异。执业医生检测出的CKD知晓率或患者自我报告的CKD为81.1%,而未诊断出时为2.6%。T2DM的初级医疗表明,推荐的尿CKD检测未得到充分利用,CKD的诊断明显不足。这是第一项表明CKD检测与知晓率相关的研究。