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The Effect of Medical Cooperation in the CKD Patients: 10-Year Multicenter Cohort Study

Authors :
Onishi, Yasuhiro
Uchida, Haruhito A.
Maeshima, Yohei
Okuyama, Yuka
Otaka, Nozomu
Ujike, Haruyo
Tanaka, Keiko
Takeuchi, Hidemi
Tsuji, Kenji
Kitagawa, Masashi
Tanabe, Katsuyuki
Morinaga, Hiroshi
Kinomura, Masaru
Kitamura, Shinji
Sugiyama, Hitoshi
Ota, Kosuke
Maruyama, Keisuke
Hiramatsu, Makoto
Oshiro, Yoshiyuki
Morioka, Shigeru
Takiue, Keiichi
Omori, Kazuyoshi
Fukushima, Masaki
Gamou, Naoyuki
Hirata, Hiroshi
Sato, Ryosuke
Makino, Hirofumi
Wada, Jun
Onishi, Yasuhiro
Uchida, Haruhito A.
Maeshima, Yohei
Okuyama, Yuka
Otaka, Nozomu
Ujike, Haruyo
Tanaka, Keiko
Takeuchi, Hidemi
Tsuji, Kenji
Kitagawa, Masashi
Tanabe, Katsuyuki
Morinaga, Hiroshi
Kinomura, Masaru
Kitamura, Shinji
Sugiyama, Hitoshi
Ota, Kosuke
Maruyama, Keisuke
Hiramatsu, Makoto
Oshiro, Yoshiyuki
Morioka, Shigeru
Takiue, Keiichi
Omori, Kazuyoshi
Fukushima, Masaki
Gamou, Naoyuki
Hirata, Hiroshi
Sato, Ryosuke
Makino, Hirofumi
Wada, Jun
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Introduction: While chronic kidney disease (CKD) is one of the most important contributors to mortality from non-communicable diseases, the number of nephrologists is limited worldwide. Medical cooperation is a system of cooperation between primary care physicians and nephrological institutions, consisting of nephrologists and multidisciplinary care teams. Although it has been reported that multidisciplinary care teams contribute to the prevention of worsening renal functions and cardiovascular events, there are few studies on the effect of a medical cooperation system. Methods: We aimed to evaluate the effect of medical cooperation on all-cause mortality and renal prognosis in patients with CKD. One hundred and sixty-eight patients who visited the one hundred and sixty-three clinics and seven general hospitals of Okayama city were recruited between December 2009 and September 2016, and one hundred twenty-three patients were classified into a medical cooperation group. The outcome was defined as the incidence of all-cause mortality, or renal composite outcome (end-stage renal disease or 50% eGFR decline). We evaluated the effects on renal composite outcome and pre-ESRD mortality while incorporating the competing risk for the alternate outcome into a Fine-Gray subdistribution hazard model. Results: The medical cooperation group had more patients with glomerulonephritis (35.0% vs. 2.2%) and less nephrosclerosis (35.0% vs. 64.5%) than the primary care group. Throughout the follow-up period of 5.59 +/- 2.78 years, 23 participants (13.7%) died, 41 participants (24.4%) reached 50% decline in eGFR, and 37 participants (22.0%) developed end-stage renal disease (ESRD). All-cause mortality was significantly reduced by medical cooperation (sHR 0.297, 95% CI 0.105-0.835, p = 0.021). However, there was a significant association between medical cooperation and CKD progression (sHR 3.069, 95% CI 1.225-7.687, p = 0.017). Conclusion: We evaluated mortality and ESRD using a CKD cohor

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1381440885
Document Type :
Electronic Resource