Harasemiw Oksana, Milks Shannon, Oakley Louise, Lavallee Barry, Chartrand Caroline, McLeod Lorraine, Di Nella Michelle, Rigatto Claudio, Tangri Navdeep, Ferguson Thomas, Komenda Paul
Chronic Disease Innovation Centre, Seven Oaks General Hospital, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
Department of Internal Medicine, Max Rady College of Medicine, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
Kidney Int Rep. 2018 Feb 10;3(4):825-832. doi: 10.1016/j.ekir.2018.02.002. eCollection 2018 Jul.
Rural and remote indigenous individuals have a high burden of chronic kidney disease (CKD) when compared to the general population. However, it has not been previously explored how these rates compare to urban-dwelling indigenous populations.
In a recent cross-sectional screening study, 1346 adults 18 to 80 years of age were screened for CKD and diabetes across 11 communities in rural and remote areas in Manitoba, Canada, as part of the First Nations Community Based Screening to Improve Kidney Health and Prevent Dialysis (FINISHED) program. An additional 284 Indigenous adults who resided in low-income areas in the city of Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada were screened as part of the NorWest Mobile Diabetes and Kidney Disease Screening and Intervention Project.
Our findings indicate that a gradient of CKD and diabetes prevalence exists for Indigenous individuals living in different geographic areas. Compared to urban-dwelling Indigenous individuals, rural-dwelling individuals had more than a 2-fold (2.1, 95% CI = 1.4-3.1) increase in diabetes whereas remote-dwelling individuals had a 4-fold (4.1, 95% CI = 2.8-6.0) increase, and more than a 3-fold (3.1, 95% CI = 2.2-4.5) increase in CKD prevalence.
Although these results highlight the relative importance of geography in determining the prevalence of diabetes and CKD in Indigenous Canadians, geography is but an important surrogate of other determinants, such as poverty and access to care.
与普通人群相比,农村和偏远地区的原住民慢性肾病(CKD)负担较重。然而,此前尚未探讨过这些发病率与城市原住民人口相比情况如何。
在最近一项横断面筛查研究中,作为改善肾脏健康和预防透析的原住民社区筛查(FINISHED)项目的一部分,对加拿大曼尼托巴省农村和偏远地区11个社区的1346名18至80岁成年人进行了CKD和糖尿病筛查。另外,作为西北移动糖尿病和肾病筛查与干预项目的一部分,对居住在加拿大曼尼托巴省温尼伯市低收入地区的284名原住民成年人进行了筛查。
我们的研究结果表明,生活在不同地理区域的原住民中存在CKD和糖尿病患病率梯度。与城市原住民相比,农村居民的糖尿病患病率增加了2倍多(2.1,95%置信区间=1.4 - 3.1),而偏远地区居民的糖尿病患病率增加了4倍(4.1,95%置信区间=2.8 - 6.0),CKD患病率增加了3倍多(3.1,95%置信区间=2.2 - 4.5)。
尽管这些结果凸显了地理位置在决定加拿大原住民糖尿病和CKD患病率方面的相对重要性,但地理位置只是贫困和医疗服务可及性等其他决定因素的一个重要替代指标。