Title: Disease Management for Chronic Kidney Disease
1Disease Management for Chronic Kidney Disease
- Dr Nick Richards
- Medical Director
- Optimal Renal Care UK
2Summary
- Multidisciplinary DM project launched April 2005
in Lincolnshire - Based in Primary Care
- Automated patient identification
- Risk stratification of patients
- Patient education
- Medicines management
- Algorithm based referral and management
- Defined and audited clinical outcomes
- Independent evaluation by ScHARR
3Why Disease Management for Chronic Kidney Disease
in The UK?
4Prevalence of CKD in USA
- NHANES 11.2 of the US population have chronic
kidney disease - Stage 1 (normal GFR) 3.3
- Stage 2 (GFR 60-90) 3.0
- Stage 3 (GFR 30-60) 4.3
- Stage 4 (GFR 15-30) 0.2
- Stage 5 (GFR 0-15) 0.2
- Coresh J. AJKD (2003), 41 1-12
5Prevalence of CKD UK
- East Kent Clinical biochemistry lab survey
- Prevalence of SCr (µmol/l) gt 180 (m) or gt135 (f)
- 5554 per million of population
- Age related 78.3 pmp lt40y, 58913 pmp gt80y
- Only 15.2 known to renal service
- Only 5.7 referred over the subsequent 12 months
- 1 year mortality 31.5
- Incidence of new CKD of this severity
- 2425 per million population
- John I. AJKD (2005) 43(5) 825-835.
6Prevalence of CKD in the UK
- London life sciences prospective study
- Population based investigation of CVD risk
- 1,000 pats. From 58 GP practices in west London
- Stage 2 (GFR 60-90) 57.9
- Stage 3 (GFR 30-59) 4.0
- Stage 4 (GFR 15-29) 0.25
- Stage 5 (GFR lt 15) 0.32
- DM, CVD or BP identifies 85 of CKD
7Consequences of Late Referral for Patients With
Chronic Kidney Disease
- Loss of chance for patients
- 30-50 of patients present lt 3 months prior to
dialysis - Mortality in late presenters in greatly increased
- 50 could have been referred earlier
- Commonest late referrals are diabetics (13)
- Roderick, P et al. QJM (2002) 95 363 - 370
8Consequences of Late Referral for Patients With
Chronic Kidney Disease
- Financial cost
- 1391 patients started renal replacement therapy
1989-2000 - Late referral - less than 3 months in 30
- Preventable cause in 6.8 ( 95 patients)
- Life time cost 14,250,000
- Prof Paul Jungers, NDT (2002) 17 371-375
9Pre Dialysis
- Pre dialysis care gt 1 year is associated with
- Slower progression to dialysis
- Lower co morbidity at start of dialysis
- Lower hospitalisation rates
- Improved survival
- Improved rehabilitation
- Greater likelihood of maintaining employment
- Better response to vaccination
- Higher with AVF
10Current Situation
- Current system is unable to cope with the problem
- Have to create a new way of managing these
patients. - Renal NSF Joint Royal Colleges
- Automatic patient identification by eGFR from
labs - Primary care based multidisciplinary management
- Protocol/algorithm based management
- Defined indications for referral to nephrologist
- Audited outcome targets e.g. BP cholesterol
11The Optimal Programme
- Automatic patient identification
- Algorithm based referral and management
- Improve performance against defined clinical
targets - Reduce comorbidity
- Reduce resource utilisation
- Reduce cost per patient
- 18 month initial period
- Independent analysis by ScHARR
12West Lincolnshire Primary Care Trust
- Rural community
- Population about 218,000
- 750 square miles
- Low proportion of ethnic minority groups
- 40 GP practices
- 109 General Practitioners
- 2 Nephrologists
13Take on Rates for Renal Replacement Therapy in
Lincolnshire
14Patient Identification
- Calculated GFR by laboratory
- MDRD equation (abbreviated 4 variable)
- 186 x (serum creatinine/88.5 (µmol/l) ) -1.154 x
(age) -0.203 - If a woman change 186 to 138
- Primary care
- Secondary care
- Known CKD patients
15How It Works In Practice
- Automatic patient identification from lab
- To GP and to Optimal
- For patients with CKD 4 and 5
- GP contacted by Optimal care team
- GP may contact Optimal care team directly
- Patient contacted by care team
- Patient enrolled in programme
- Risk stratified
- Treated as per algorithms
16Optimal Renal Care Application (ORCA - The IT
Solution)
1o Care - Clinical data - Activity data
Care team -Clinical data
Pathology data -New patients -Old patients
2o Care - Clinical data - Activity data
ORCA
Alerts for action -Failure to meet
targets -Perform test (eg HbA1c)
QOF data Disease registry Commissioning
Other systems e.g. National registry
GFR alerts -To care team -To 1o care -To 2o care
Reports -Patients progress -Audit against
targets -Intervention history
17Targets
Parameter Target
Haemoglobin gt11 g/dl
Ferritin (patients on EPO) gt150µg/l
Calcium 2.10 2.60 mmol/l
Phosphate 0.84 1.45 mmol/l
Parathyroid hormone lt 4 x upper limit of range
Bicarbonate 22-26 mmol/l
Potassium 3.5-6.0 mmol/l
Referral to smoking cessation programme 100 of smokers
18Results to Date
19GFRs and New Patients Per Week
20GFR Requests From Primary Care
21New Patients Primary Secondary Care
22Primary Care CKD 2 3
23Primary Care CKD 4 5
24Secondary Care CKD 2 3
25Secondary Care CKD 4 5
26Source of Secondary Care Patients
27CKD 2 Range GFR - Urinalysis
Practice 1 Practice 2 Practice 3 Not
tested 180 180 153 Normal 179 177 154 Abnorm
al 17 21 9 Abnormal 8.6 10.6 5.5 Total 37
6 378 316
28Prevalence Estimates
WLPCT London NHANES Patients
CKD 2 range 18.9 57.9 16650
CKD 2 1.73 3.3 1532
CKD 3 8.76 4.0 4.3 7716
CKD 4 0.57 0.25 0.20 503
CKD 5 0.19 0.32 0.20 163
29Patient Identification
2004-2005 Nephrology Referrals 2005-2006 Identified by Optimal (wk 21)
CKD 4 32 503
CKD 5 6 163
30Nephrology Outpatient Referrals
April May June July Aug
2004 28 19 23 34 18
2005 32 38 59 61 76
31Managing Demand
- Referral clinical assessment service
- Jointly with WLPCT
- 26 referrals (from 2 weeks)
- 9 followed referral guidelines
32Gender
33Age breakdown
34Age Breakdown by CKD ()
28
70
80
55
35CKD 4 Age Profile
36CKD 5 Age Profile
37Initial Risk Stratification
38Co-morbid Conditions at Presentation
39Co-morbid Conditions
40Change In CKD Status
- 196 patients identified from Primary care changed
CKD status - 70 deteriorated
- 44 improved
- 37 deteriorated then improved
- 44 oscillated about the boundary
41GFR Fallers gt 5 ml/min
N70
42Rising GFR gt5 ml/min
N44
43Recovery
N37
44Progression From CKD 2
45Correction of Acidosis
Achieving target
46Haemoglobin gt11 gm/dl
47Iron Deficiency
Achieving target
48Problems
- Lack of GP buy in due to
- Increased work load
- Increased cost
- No payment (not in QOF)
- GPs dont routinely test urine
- Failure to follow guidelines
- Lack of IT integration
49In conclusion
- Identified majority of patients with CKD within
WL PCT - Instituted patient education programme
- Changed the referral process
- Ensure that patients are referred appropriately
and in a timely manner - Improves patient outcomes?
- Reduction in resource utilisation?
50Optimal Renal Care UK
- Saracen House
- Crusader Road
- Lincoln LN6 7AF
- 01522 563580
- Dr Nick Richards
- nick.richards_at_optimalrenalcareuk.com
- 07768 936192