Kidney Health Research Collaborative, Department of Medicine, San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center and University of California, San Francisco, California, USA,
Division of Healthcare Delivery Science & Innovation, Department of Population Health Sciences, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, New York, USA,
Am J Nephrol. 2020;51(12):959-965. doi: 10.1159/000511848. Epub 2020 Dec 17.
Kidney disease is a major global public health problem, and laboratory testing of kidney health measures is essential for diagnosis and monitoring. The availability and affordability of kidney health laboratory tests across countries has not been systematically described.
The International Society of Nephrology (ISN), in partnership with leaders of a Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) Controversies Conference, surveyed a representative subset of ISN-Global Kidney Health Atlas (ISN-GKHA) respondents from April to June 2020. We assessed the association between country gross national income (GNI) per capita and laboratory testing availability and affordability.
Of 33 regional expert nephrologists invited, 24 (73%) responded, representing all 10 ISN regions around the world. Availability of kidney health laboratory tests was as follows: serum Cr (100%), serum cystatin C (67%), urine albumin (96%), urine Cr (100%), and dipstick urinalysis (100%). Median (IQR) reimbursement values in international dollars were as follows: serum Cr Int$ 6.61 (3.42-8.84), serum cystatin C Int$ 31.51 (17.36-46.25), urine albumin Int$ 10.22 (5.90-15.42), urine Cr Int$ 7.50 (1.66-8.84), and dipstick urinalysis Int$ 6.26 (2.56-8.40). Reimbursement values did not differ significantly by World Bank income group or by GNI per capita.
There was widespread availability of kidney health laboratory tests and substantial variation in reimbursement values. To achieve meaningful progress across nations in mitigating the growth of kidney disease, access to affordable diagnostic technology is essential. Our results are highly relevant to policymakers and researchers as countries increasingly consider national strategies for kidney disease detection and management.
肾脏疾病是一个重大的全球公共卫生问题,对肾脏健康指标进行实验室检测对于诊断和监测至关重要。然而,各国提供和负担得起肾脏健康实验室检测的情况尚未得到系统描述。
国际肾脏病学会(ISN)与肾脏病:改善全球结局(KDIGO)争议会议的领导人合作,于 2020 年 4 月至 6 月期间对 ISN-全球肾脏健康地图集(ISN-GKHA)的代表性受访者进行了调查。我们评估了国家人均国民总收入(GNI)与实验室检测的可及性和可负担性之间的关联。
在受邀的 33 名区域专家肾病学家中,有 24 名(73%)做出了回应,代表了全球 10 个 ISN 区域。以下是肾脏健康实验室检测的可用性情况:血清肌酐(100%)、血清胱抑素 C(67%)、尿白蛋白(96%)、尿肌酐(100%)和尿干化学分析(100%)。以国际元计的中位数(IQR)报销值如下:血清肌酐 Int$6.61(3.42-8.84)、血清胱抑素 C Int$31.51(17.36-46.25)、尿白蛋白 Int$10.22(5.90-15.42)、尿肌酐 Int$7.50(1.66-8.84)和尿干化学分析 Int$6.26(2.56-8.40)。报销值在世界银行收入组或人均 GNI 方面没有显著差异。
肾脏健康实验室检测的应用广泛,但报销值存在较大差异。为了在各国实现减缓肾脏疾病发展的实质性进展,获得负担得起的诊断技术至关重要。我们的研究结果与决策者和研究人员高度相关,因为各国越来越多地考虑制定国家策略来检测和管理肾脏疾病。