Tawhari Mohammed, Alhamadh Moustafa, Alhabeeb Abdulrahman, Ureeg Abdulaziz, Alghnam Suliman, Alhejaili Fayez, Alnasser Lubna A, Sayyari Abdullah
College of Medicine, King Saud Bin Abdulaziz University for Health Sciences, Ministry of National Guard - Health Affairs, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Department of Medicine, Division of Nephrology, King Abdulaziz Medical City, Ministry of National Guard - Health Affairs, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
BMC Nephrol. 2024 Feb 19;25(1):59. doi: 10.1186/s12882-024-03479-0.
In Saudi Arabia (SA), there has been an alarming increase in the prevalence of chronic kidney diseases (CKD) over the last three decades. Despite being one of the largest countries in the Middle East, renal conditions remain understudied, and there is limited data on their epidemiology and outcomes in SA.
To document the experience of establishing a local renal registry assessing the epidemiology of CKD and identifying potential areas for improving the quality and delivery of care for CKD patients.
This is a multi-center retrospective registry. Potential participants were identified through the ICD-10 codes from five hospitals serving the National Guard affiliates in SA. Patients aged ≥ 18 years treated in any National Guard hospital since 2010 for glomerulonephritis, CKD, or received hemodialysis, peritoneal dialysis, or renal transplant were enrolled. Once enrolled in the registry, patients were followed to the last visit date. RedCap was used to create and host the online registry platform.
A total of 2,912 patients were included, and more than half were younger than 60 years old. Two-thirds of the patients were overweight (25%) or obese (37%). Glomerulonephritis was diagnosed in 10% of the patients, and dialysis-dependent and kidney transplant patients accounted for 31.4% and 24.4%, respectively. Hypertension and diabetes mellitus were detected among 52% and 43% of the participants, respectively. Hemodialysis was the most prevalent dialysis method, with patients spending 3.6 ± 0.4 h per session to receive this treatment. One in every five participants had a kidney biopsy taken (21%). Several barriers and facilitators of the success of this registry were identified.
The KIND registry provides much-needed information about CKD in Saudi Arabia and serves as a model for future projects investigating the natural history and progression of the spectrum of renal diseases. Logistic and financial challenges to the sustainability of registries are identified and discussed.
在沙特阿拉伯,过去三十年慢性肾脏病(CKD)的患病率急剧上升。尽管沙特是中东最大的国家之一,但肾脏疾病仍未得到充分研究,关于其在沙特的流行病学和治疗结果的数据有限。
记录建立本地肾脏登记处的经验,评估CKD的流行病学,并确定改善CKD患者护理质量和提供方式的潜在领域。
这是一项多中心回顾性登记研究。通过国际疾病分类第十版(ICD - 10)编码,从为沙特国民警卫队附属机构服务的五家医院中识别潜在参与者。自2010年以来,在任何国民警卫队医院接受治疗的年龄≥18岁、患有肾小球肾炎、CKD或接受血液透析、腹膜透析或肾移植的患者被纳入研究。一旦纳入登记处,患者被随访至最后一次就诊日期。使用Research Electronic Data Capture(RedCap)创建并托管在线登记平台。
共纳入2912名患者,其中一半以上年龄小于60岁。三分之二的患者超重(25%)或肥胖(37%)。10%的患者被诊断为肾小球肾炎,依赖透析和肾移植患者分别占31.4%和24.4%。分别在52%和43%的参与者中检测到高血压和糖尿病。血液透析是最普遍的透析方式,患者每次接受该治疗花费3.6±0.4小时。每五名参与者中有一人进行了肾活检(21%)。确定了该登记处成功的几个障碍和促进因素。
KIND登记处提供了沙特阿拉伯CKD急需的信息,并为未来研究肾脏疾病谱的自然史和进展的项目提供了一个模型。确定并讨论了登记处可持续性面临的后勤和财务挑战。