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Incidence of Uncommon Clinical Events in USA Patients with Dialysis-Dependent and Nondialysis-Dependent Chronic Kidney Disease: Analysis of Electronic Health Records from TriNetX

Authors :
Alyshah Abdul Sultan
Syed Asif Haque
Glen James
Dustin J. Little
Katarina Hedman
Mark T. Houser
Seth Kuranz
Xia Wang
Source :
Nephron Clin Pract
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Introduction: Further understanding of adverse clinical events in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) is needed. This study aimed to describe characteristics of patients with nondialysis-dependent (NDD) and dialysis-dependent (DD) CKD and to assess incidence rates of uncommon adverse clinical events of interest in these patients. Methods: This retrospective study used electronic medical record data from USA CKD patients (≥18 years) with estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) 2 between January 1, 2010, and December 31, 2018, obtained from the USA-based TriNetX database. NDD-CKD and DD-CKD were diagnosed and staged from ≥2 consecutive eGFR readings, recorded ≥90 days apart. Dialysis was identified using procedure codes for renal replacement therapy. Outcomes assessed were select uncommon adverse clinical events, defined by International Classification of Disease, 9th and 10th Revision codes. Results: Incidence rates of adverse clinical events per 100 person-years (95% confidence interval) were generally higher in patients with DD-CKD versus NDD-CKD. Differences were particularly pronounced for hyperkalemia (26.9 [26.2–27.6] vs. 4.5 [4.5–4.6]), acidosis (15.1 [14.7–15.6] vs. 3.4 [3.4–3.4]), and sepsis (14.6 [14.2–15.1] vs. 3.3 [3.3–3.4]). Among DD-CKD patients, incidence rates of adverse events were particularly high during the first 3 months following dialysis initiation. Incidence of adverse clinical events generally increased with decreasing eGFR among patients with NDD-CKD and with hemoglobin Conclusions: Our results help establish baseline rates of uncommon adverse clinical events and provide additional evidence of increased morbidity for patients with DD-CKD versus NDD-CKD.

Details

ISSN :
22353186
Volume :
145
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nephron
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d7063cd5826bfc94a424a5f15bcab820