Title: CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE
1CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE
- Reinaldo Rosario MD, FASN
- Renal Electrolyte Hypertension Consultants
(REHC)
2NATURAL HISTORY OF RENAL DISEASE
- Initial injury to the kidney
- Adaptive hyperfiltration
- Long-term damage to the remaining nephrons
proteinuria and progressive renal insufficiency - Advanced renal disease dysfunction volume
overload, hyperkalemia, metabolic acidosis, HTN,
anemia and bone disease - End Stage Renal Disease (ESRD)
3CKD - DEFINITION
- Evidence of structural or functional kidney
abnormalities that persists for at least 3
months, with or without a decreased GFR. - GFR lt60 mL/min/1.73m² for 3 months, with or
without kidney damage - Prevalence 4.7 or 8.3 million
- NKF. Am J Kidney Dis. 200239(supp1)S1
4STAGES OF CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE
5PREVALENCE OF CKD
- NKF. Am J Kidney Dis. 200239(supp 1)S1
6ESRD
- As of Dec. 31 2006 506,256 dialysis pts
- In 2006 alone, 110,854 pts entered the ESRD
program - Medicare expenditure - 22.7 billion in 2006
- Projected number of ESRD pts by 2010 651,330
and Medicare cost in excess of 28 billion
dollars
- U.S. Renal Data System USRDS 2006
7ESRD
- Annual mortality rate for all ESRD pts on
treatment is 20-fold higher than the general
population - At age 45 life expectancy
- General population
- 34.7 years
- - ESRD
- 6.2 years on dialysis / 19.5 years
- with a functioning kidney graft
-
- U.S. Renal Data System USRDS 2002
8CAUSES OF DEATH IN ESRD
- U.S. Renal Data System USRDS 2002
9MULTIPLE RISK FACTORS FOR CKD
- Diabetes
- Hypertension
- Autoimmune disease
- Systemic infections
- Exposure to drugs associated with acute decline
in kidney function - Recovery from acute kidney failure
- Older age
- Family history of kidney disease
- Reduced kidney mass
- Racial/ethnic background
- Smoking
- NKF. Am J Kidney Dis. 200239S46
- Pinto-Sietsma. Ann Intern Med. 2000133585
10EVALUATING PATIENTS AT RISK FOR CKD
- Evaluating risk factors and identifying GFR
declines are essential to the prompt and
appropriate management of CKD - GFR or age/weight-sensitive eGFR
- Blood pressure
- Glucose
- Urinalysis
- Microalbuminuria/proteinuria
11COMORBIDITIES AND COMPLICATIONS OF CKD
- Anemia
- Hypertension
- Cardiovascular disease
- Diabetes
- Osteodystrophy
- Malnutrition
- Metabolic acidosis
- Dyslipidemia
- Deficits in functioning and well-being
- Zabetakis. Am J Kidney Dis. 200036(suppl 3)S31
- NKF. Am J Kidney Dis. 200239S17
12DELAYED DIAGNOSIS OF CKD LEADS TO UNDERUSE OF
INTERVENTIONS
- Lack of interventions to treat HTN, CVD, DM,
anemia, and malnutrition - Under use and delayed consultations with
nephrologists, cardiovascular specialists, or
dietitians - Lack of patient education
- Lack of a permanent vascular access at initiation
of hemodialysis
13OPTIMAL CKD PATIENT CARE
- Early detection of CKD
- Delay Prevent
Treat Prepare - progression complications
comorbidities or RRT - ACE inhibitors Anemia
Cardiac disease Educate
patient - BP control Malnutrition
Vascular disease Select RRT
modality - Blood sugar Osteodystrophy
Diabetes Create
access - control and initiate
- Acidosis dialysis
in a - Protein timely fashion
- restriction?
-
-
-
- Pereira. Kidney International.
200057351 -
14MANAGEMENT OF PATIENTS WITH CKD
- Blood pressure control
- Diabetes control
- Cardiovascular disease management
- Anemia management
- Iron management
- Vitamin D and vital bone protection
- Eating well and exercise
- Access planning
15CARDIOVASCULAR RISK AND GFR
- Go AS. N Engl J Med 20043511300
16CARDIOVASCULAR MORTALITY AND HYPERTENSION
- Lewington S . Lancet 2002 360 1903-13.
17PREVALENCE OF HYPERTENSION IN CKD
- 1795 patients with kidney diseases were screened
- GFR range 13-55 mL/min/1.73m²
- ? BP in 83 of patients (n1494)
- Buckalew. Am J Kidney Dis 199628811.
18BLOOD PRESSURE IS POORLY CONTROLLED IN CKD
- Coresh. Arch Intern Med. 20011611207
19Aggressive Blood Pressure GoalsConsensus Across
Treatment Guidelines
20BLOOD PRESSURE CONTROL IN CKD GOALS
- NKF. Am J Kidney Dis. 20023a(suppl 1)S1
21?GFR ?BP MEDS
- Nephsap. American Society of Nephrology 2005
4101
22BP CONTROL INTERVENTIONS
- ACE inhibitors
- Angiotensin-receptor blockers (ARBs)
- Calcium channel blockers (CCBs)
- Diuretics
- Low-sodium diet
- Combination therapy
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28DIABETES MELLITUS PREDICTIONS
- In the next 10 years there will be a 50 increase
in the number of diabetics. - 25 to 40 of these individuals will develop
kidney disease. - Obesity, poor dietary habits, lack of physical
activity, family history are risks.
29THE EPIDEMIC OF DIABETES
- Prevalence increased by 40 1990-99.
- Estimated increase by 165 2000-2050.
- Individuals born in 2000 risk developing
diabetes 32.8 males, 38.5 females. Hispanic
lifetime risk 45.4 males, 52.5 females.
30Adults With Diagnosed Diabetes
1990
No dataavailable
Less than 4
46
Above 6
Includes women with a history of gestational
diabetes.
Mokdad AH et al. Diabetes Care.
200023(9)1278-1283.
31Adults With Diagnosed Diabetes
2000
46
Above 6
Includes women with a history of gestational
diabetes.
Mokdad AH et al. JAMA. 2001286(10)1195-1200.
32DIABETIC KIDNEY DISEASE SIGNIFICANCE
- Accounts for 40-50 total kidney failure in the
United States - 40-50 of TYPE 1 Patients and 40 of TYPE 2
Patients will develop clinical diabetic kidney
disease. - Diabetes affects certain ethnic groups more
frequently than caucasians native americans 7x,
hispanics and latinos 4-5x, african americans 4x.
33ANEMIA IN PATIENTS WITH CKD
- N 5222
- CKD
- SCr 1.5-6.0 mg/d(women)
- SCr 2.0-6.0 mg/dL (men)
34Severe Anemia is Common at the Start of Dialysis
- Obrador. Kidney Int. 2001 601875
35ANEMIA SIGNIFICANTLY IMPACTS CKD PATIENTS
- Macdougall. Semin Oncol. 199825(suppl 7)40
36EVALUATION OF ANEMIA
- Hemoglobin and/or hematocrit
- Red-blood-cell indices
- Reticulocyte count
- Iron parameters
- Test for occult-blood in stool
- NKF. Am J Kidney Dis. 200137S192
37TREATMENT OF ANEMIA
- Iron supplementation (IV/PO)
- Erythropoiesis stimulating agents
38IRON DEFICIENCY IN CKD
- Preexisting Iron Deficiency
- Poor nutrition
- Blood loss
- Iron deficiency with erythropoiesis-stimulating
agents - Increased iron needs
39ASSESSMENT OF IRON STATUS
- Frequently used tests
- Serum ferritin
- Transferrin saturation
- Additional measurements
- Reticulocyte Hb content
- Hypochromic RBCs
- Erythrocyte ferritin
- NKF. Am J Kidney Dis. 200137(suppl 1)S182
- Macdougall. Curr Opin Hematol. 19996121
- Goodnough. Blood. 200096823
40POSSIBLE INADEQUACY OF ORAL IRON
- Low intestinal absorption of oral iron, even in
healthy persons - Poor patient adherence
- Intravenous iron has improved anemia in CKD and
ESRD when oral iron has failed
- NKF. Am J Kidney Dis. 200137 (suppl 1)S182
- Silverberg. Kidney Int. 199955(suppl 69)S79
41Anemia and LVH
Prevalence of LVH ( Patients)
Mean Hb (g/dL) 14.1 13.2
12.5 11.4
- Levin. Nephrol Dial Transplant, 200116 Suppl 2)
7.
42LVH and CKD
- LVH is an independent risk predictor of cardiac
death - HTN, anemia and diabetes are modifiable
predictors of LVH - Blood pressure increase is associated with 3
increase in LVH risk - Hb decrease of 1 g/dL is associated with 6
increase in LVH risk
- Greaves. Am J Kid Dis. 1994 24768
- Levin. Am J Kid Dis. 1996 27347.
43Normal Hematocrit Trial
- Study Objective Whether normal Hct value should
be the target level in dialysis patients - Study Design 1233 HD patients with cardiac
disease. Baseline Hct. 27- 33. Mean age 65
years. - Primary Endpoint time to death or first nonfatal
myocardial infarction - Methods Patients randomly assigned to achieve
and maintain a Hct of 42 or 32 WITH EPO tx - Results Study terminated early (29 months) due
to increase mortality in the group targeted for
normal Hct level.
44CHOIR Study (Correction of Hemoglobin and
Outcomes in Renal Insufficiency)
- Study Objective Whether a normal or near-normal
Hb value should be the target level in
pre-dialysis pts with CKD - Study Design 1432 CKD patients (eGFR 15-50
mL/min) with Hb lt 11g/dL - Primary Endpoint Composite of death, myocardial
infarction, stroke, and hospitalization for heart
failure - Methods Randomization to achieve target Hb of
either 13.5 or 11.3g/dL - Results Study terminated early(16 months) due to
higher number of events in the high Hb group.
- Drueke, TB et al. N Engl J Med 20063552071
45CREATE Study(Cardiovascular Risk Reduction by
Early Anemia Treatment with Epoietin Beta)
- Study Objective Whether a normal or near-normal
Hb value should be the target level in
pre-dialysis pts with CKD. - Study Design 603 pts with GFRs between 15-35
mL/min - Primary Endpoint Composite of eight CV events
- Methods Randomization to normal Hb (13-15 g/dL)
or subnormal (10.5 11.5 g/dL) - Results At 3 years similar risk of experiencing
the primary endpoint in bot groups ( HR of 0.78,
95 CI 0.53-1.14)
- Singh, AK et al. N Engl J Med 2006 3552085
46Ongoing and Future Studies
- TREAT study Randomized, placebo-controlled
trial in Predialysis pts with DM type 2 to Hb 13
or greater than9 g/dL. - Primary endpoint is overall mortality and
nonfatal CV events. - NEPHRODIAB2 trial Prospective randomized
open-label trial in CKD stage 3 and 4 with DM
type 2. Randomization to Hb 13-14.9 g/dL or 11-12
g/dL. - Primary endpoint is decline in kidney function.
- Secondary outcomes include mortality
-
47Anemia current recommendations
- Close monitoring of predialysis Hb levels
- Erythropoietic agents rather than blood
transfusions - Target Hb should generally be in the range of 11
12 g/dL and should not exceed 13 g/dL. - Supplemental iron
48SECONDARY HYPERPARATHYROIDISM
- Most common form of renal osteodystrophy
- Prevalence
- 47 of 176 patients with ESRD had a PTH level
more than three times the normal amount
- Mizumoto. Nephrol Dial Transplant. 199491751
- Billa. Perit Dial Int. 200020315
49VITAMIN D DEFICIENCY AND PHOSPHATE RETENTION
- CKD
-
- Vitamin D Deficiency Phosphate Retention
- Hypocalcemia
- Hyperparathyroidism
- Osteodystrophy
- Liach. In Brenner. The Kidney. 19962187
- Schomig.Nephrol Dial Transplant. 200015(suppl
5)18
50Hyperphosphatemia
- Begins early in renal disease
- Intimately related to secondary
hyperparathyroidism which contributes to release
of calcium and phosphorus from bone - Elevated Ca x PO4 promotes precipitation of such
in arteries, joints, soft tissues and the vicera - Ca x PO4 gt55 associated with increased mortality,
similar to that observed with elevated PO4 level
alone
- Menon, V. Am J Kidney Dis 2005 46455.
51MANAGEMENT OF VITAMIN D DEFICIENCY AND PHOSPHATE
RETENTION
- Vitamin D analogs
- Low phosphate diet (800 mg/day)
- Phosphate binders (calcium and non-calcium based)
- Calcium
- Coburn. J Am Soc Nephrol. 19989S71
- Schroeder. Nephrol Dial Transplant. 200015460
- Chertow. Clin Nephrol. 19995118
52Phosphate Binders
53ACID/BASE BALANCE
- Renal NH4
- Excretion
- 40 mEq/day
- Endogenous Renal Net Acid
- H Production Renal Excretion
- 70 mEq/day Excretion 70
mEq/day - 30 mEq/day
- Normal Acid/Base Balance
- HCO3 24 mEq/L
- Alpem. Am J Kidney Dis. 199729291
54CONSEQUENCES OF METABOLIC ACIDOSIS
- Abnormal renal handling of ions
- ? tubular-phosphate reabsorption
- ? filtered load of calcium and phosphate
- ? tubular-calcium reabsorption
- Increased resorption of bone
- Increased muscle catabolism
- Franch. J Am Soc Nephrol. 19989S78
55TREATMENT OF METABOLIC ACIDOSIS IN CKD
- Goal
- Serum HCO3- gt 20 mEq/L
- pH gt 7.35
- Agents
- Sodium bicarbonate tablets
- (650 mg 8 mEq HCO3-)
- Sodium citrate (Shohls solution)
- Dose of HCO3-
- 1.0 1.5 mEq/kg/day
- Dependent upon initial serum HCO3- and degree of
renal insufficiency
- Dubose TD. Harrisons Principles of Internal
Medicine. 1998277
56Recommendations in Metabolic Acidosis Treatment
- Alkali therapy to maintain plasma bicarbonate
concentration above 22 meq/L (K/DOQI guideline
recommendation) - Sodium bicarbonate Agent of choice may cause
bloating. - Sodium Citrate Avoid when also taking
aluminum-containing anti-acids since it markedly
enhances aluminum absoption
57EATING WELL AND EXERCISE
- Protein malnutrition is common in CKD
- Consider dietary protein restriction
- Properly monitored by experienced dietitian
and nephrologist - May improve long-term survival of patients
- Exercise
- Improves physical functioning
- Improves cardiovascular health
- Bailey. Therapy in Nephrology and Hypertension.
1998474
58EXERCISE
- ? Physical functioning
- ? Blood pressure control
- ? Muscle, bone strength
- ? Level of cholesterol and triglycerides
- Better sleep
- ? Control of body weight
- NKF. Staying fit with Kidney Disease
59VASCULAR ACCESS FOR HEMODIALYSIS
- Establish communication between nephrologist and
PCP - Preserve an arm no intravenous injections or
blood draws - Refer to surgeon for fistula when SCr gt4mg/dL,
CrCl lt25 mL/min, or dialysis anticipated within 1
year - Fistula may take 3 to 4 months to mature
- NKF. Am J Kidney Dis. 200137(suppl 1)S147
60TEAM APPROACH ROLE OF PRIMARY PHYSICIAN AND
NEPHROLOGIST IN CKD
- Nephrologists
- Assist in development of care strategy
- Aid recommendation and implementation of patient
care - Provide role-specific patient education
- Primary Physician
- Screen and identify risk factors of CKD
- Provide ongoing management of patients with CKD
- Provide role-specific patient education
61BENEFITS OF EARLY INTERVENTION IN THE MANAGEMENT
OF CKD
- Delayed progression of CKD
- Improved teamwork between physicians
- Decreased risk of cardiovascular complications
- Improved dialysis outcomes
- Better educated and prepared patients
- Pereira. Kidney Int. 200057351.