1. Lost to follow-up: the bottleneck of early referral to renal units?
- Author
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Gb, Piccoli, Soragna G, Mezza E, Putaggio S, Motta D, Gai M, Anania P, Fabrizio Fop, Bermond F, Burdese M, Vaggione S, Malfi B, Jeantet A, Gp, Segoloni, and Piccoli G
- Subjects
Treatment Refusal ,Outpatient Clinics, Hospital ,Creatinine ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Humans ,Regression Analysis ,Kidney Diseases ,Middle Aged ,Referral and Consultation ,Aged - Abstract
Early referral is a major goal in chronic kidney diseases; however, loss to follow-up, potentially limiting its advantages, has never been studied.In order to assess the prevalence and causes of loss to follow-up, a telephone inquiry was performed in a renal outpatient unit, mainly dedicated to early referral of diabetic patients. Patients were considered to be in follow-up if there was at least one check-up in the period February 2001-February 2002, and lost to follow-up if the last check-up had occurred in the previous year. The reasons for loss to follow-up were related to typical clinical-biochemical parameters to define a "drop-out profile".195 patients were on follow-up: median creatinine 1.4 mg/dL, age 64, 76.9% diabetics. 81 patients were lost to follow-up: creatinine 1.4 mg/dL, age 70, 73.8% diabetics. A telephone number was available in 87.6% of the cases; 25 were not found, 7 had died, 24 were non-compliant, 1 was bed-ridden, 12 had changed care unit, 2 had started dialysis. Renal care was shorter in those lost to follow-up; among the latter, serum creatinine and age were significantly lower in non-compliant patients. A logistic regression model confirmed the significance of lower serum creatinine at last check-up in non-compliant patients (p=0.018).Loss to follow-up is a problem in nephrology; lack of awareness probably causes the higher drop-out rate at lower creatinine levels. The initial period of care may be crucial for long-term compliance. Further studies are needed to tailor organizational and educational interventions.
- Published
- 2003