Grant Christopher H, Salim Ehsan, Lees Jennifer S, Stevens Kate I
The Glasgow Renal & Transplant Unit, Queen Elizabeth University Hospital, Govan, Glasgow, UK.
College of Medical, Veterinary & Life Sciences, The University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK.
Clin Kidney J. 2023 Feb 28;16(7):1081-1091. doi: 10.1093/ckj/sfad028. eCollection 2023 Jul.
The relationship between socioeconomic deprivation and health is inequitable. Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is an archetypal disease of inequality, being more common amongst those living in deprivation. The prevalence of CKD is rising driven by an increase in lifestyle-related conditions. This narrative review describes deprivation and its association with adverse outcomes in adults with non-dialysis-dependent CKD including disease progression, end-stage kidney disease, cardiovascular disease and all-cause mortality. We explore the social determinants of health and individual lifestyle factors to address whether patients with CKD who are socioeconomically deprived have poorer outcomes than those of higher socioeconomic status. We describe whether observed differences in outcomes are associated with income, employment, educational attainment, health literacy, access to healthcare, housing, air pollution, cigarette smoking, alcohol use or aerobic exercise. The impact of socioeconomic deprivation in adults with non-dialysis-dependent CKD is complex, multi-faceted and frequently under-explored within the literature. There is evidence that patients with CKD who are socioeconomically deprived have faster disease progression, higher risk of cardiovascular disease and premature mortality. This appears to be the result of both socioeconomic and individual lifestyle factors. However, there is a paucity of studies and methodological limitations. Extrapolation of findings to different societies and healthcare systems is challenging, however, the disproportionate effect of deprivation in patients with CKD necessitates a call to action. Further empirical study is warranted to establish the true cost of deprivation in CKD to patients and societies.
社会经济剥夺与健康之间的关系是不平等的。慢性肾脏病(CKD)是一种典型的不平等疾病,在生活贫困人群中更为常见。由于与生活方式相关的疾病增多,CKD的患病率正在上升。本叙述性综述描述了剥夺及其与非透析依赖性CKD成人不良结局的关联,包括疾病进展、终末期肾病、心血管疾病和全因死亡率。我们探讨健康的社会决定因素和个体生活方式因素,以研究社会经济贫困的CKD患者是否比社会经济地位较高的患者有更差的结局。我们描述了观察到的结局差异是否与收入、就业、教育程度、健康素养、医疗保健可及性、住房、空气污染、吸烟、饮酒或有氧运动有关。社会经济剥夺对非透析依赖性CKD成人的影响是复杂的、多方面的,且在文献中常常未得到充分探讨。有证据表明,社会经济贫困的CKD患者疾病进展更快、心血管疾病风险更高且过早死亡。这似乎是社会经济因素和个体生活方式因素共同作用的结果。然而,研究数量不足且存在方法学局限性。将研究结果外推至不同社会和医疗体系具有挑战性,然而,剥夺对CKD患者的不成比例影响需要我们采取行动。有必要进行进一步的实证研究,以确定剥夺对CKD患者和社会造成的真正代价。