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Late creation of vascular access increased post-hemodialysis mortality, hospitalization, and health-care expenditure: A population-based cohort study in Taiwan

Authors :
Te-Hui Kuo
Ya-Hui Chang
Li-Jung Elizabeth Ku
Wei-Hung Lin
Jo-Yen Chao
An-Bang Wu
Chia-Chun Lee
Ming-Cheng Wang
Chung-Yi Li
Source :
Journal of the Formosan Medical Association, Vol 123, Iss 8, Pp 882-890 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2024.

Abstract

Background/purpose: The optimal timing of vascular access (VA) creation for hemodialysis (HD) and whether this timing affects mortality and health-care utilization after HD initiation remain unclear. Thus, we conducted a population-based study to explore their association. Methods: We used Taiwan's National Health Insurance Research Database to analyze health-care outcomes and utilization in a cohort initiating HD during 2003–2013. We stratified patients by the following VA creation time points: >180, 91–180, 31–90, and ≤30 days before and ≤30 days after HD initiation and examined all-cause mortality, ambulatory care utilization/costs, hospital admission/costs, and total expenditure within 2 years after HD. Cox regression, Poisson regression, and general linear regression were used to analyze mortality, health-care utilization, and costs respectively. Results: We identified 77,205 patients who started HD during 2003–2013. Compared with the patients undergoing VA surgery >180 days before HD initiation, those undergoing VA surgery ≤30 days before HD initiation had the highest mortality—15.92 deaths per 100-person-years, crude hazard ratio (HR) 1.56, and adjusted HR 1.28, the highest hospital admissions rates— 2.72 admission per person-year, crude rate ratio (RR) 1.48 and adjusted RR 1.32, and thus the highest health-care costs— US$31,390 per person-year, 7% increase of costs and 6% increase with adjustment within the 2-year follow-up after HD initiation. Conclusion: Late VA creation for HD can increase all-cause mortality, hospitalization, and health-care costs within 2 years after HD initiation. Early preparation of VA has the potential to reduce post-HD mortality and healthcare expenses for the ESKD patients.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09296646
Volume :
123
Issue :
8
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal of the Formosan Medical Association
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.66639df6444c3f8661a30e3b7834f1
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jfma.2024.02.009