"Kidney disease often occurs in conjunction
with a number of other conditions, including
diabetes and high blood pressure, but many
patients and their family members are not
aware of this association," says Dr. Heejung
Bang, assistant professor in the Division of
Biostatistics and Epidemiology in the
Department of Public Health at Weill Cornell
Medical College.
Patients with CKD can be identified early by
a test that measures the level of creatinine
in the blood. (Serum creatinine, a breakdown
product of muscle, is elevated in people
with impaired kidney function.)
They can then be given treatments that will
significantly delay the progression to
end-stage kidney disease. Early detection
and treatment of CKD can also lessen
cardiovascular complications that sometimes
occur with the condition.
"Unfortunately, many patients do not find
out they have CKD until it has progressed to
end-stage kidney disease," says Dr. Abhijit
V. Kshirsagar, of the Kidney Center and
Division of Nephrology, University of North
Carolina School of Medicine, the senior
author and major medical investigator of the
research project.
"The purpose of the study was to determine
which patient characteristics are most
associated with CKD, and to develop a simple
method to identify individuals who should be
screened in a variety of different settings
in real life."
The researchers examined comprehensive
demographic, clinical and medical history
variables as potential risk factors of CKD,
based on the medical literature on this
subject.
Through statistical modeling and validation,
they were able to determine that only seven
factors -- age, female gender, hypertension,
diabetes, cardiovascular disease,
proteinuria (an abnormal amount of protein
in the urine) and anemia -- had significant
associations with CKD in the study group.
These characteristics are easily identified
by the general public and health-care
providers through a user-friendly
questionnaire. They frequently occur
together and cumulatively affect underlying
kidney disease.
If a patient completes the questionnaire
with a total score of four or higher, a
confirmatory testing for creatinine
concentration and/or glomerular filtration
rate (GFR), directed by a health-care
professional, would be strongly recommended.
Thirty-six percent of the 8,530 study
participants scored four or higher on the
questionnaire.
"Although current clinical practice
guidelines recommend screening of
individuals 18 years or older with a family
history of diabetes, hypertension or kidney
disease, or a personal history of diabetes
or hypertension, these recommendations focus
on single risk factors and do not quantify
the cumulative effect of multiple risk
factors.
Our method made use of the coexisting risk
factors that were identified by a valid
scientific approach, greatly enhanced upon
the concept-based selection, and rigorously
followed the practice of evidence-based
research," said Dr. Bang.
In the future, the questionnaire will be
tested in several settings, including a
community-based screening program. The
researchers hope their model will be used
not only in medical encounters such as in
primary care or nephrology clinics, but also
in public health initiatives and education
programs.
The scoring algorithm will be posted on
medical information Web sites for public
use, including the UNC Kidney Center Web
site, to make people more familiar with
associated risk factors and to increase
awareness of this serious disease.
The co-authors of the study were Drs. Suma
Vupputuri and David A. Shoham,
epidemiologists from UNC; and Drs. Philip J.
Klemmer, Debbie Gipson and Romulo E.
Colindres, from the Kidney Center and
Division of Nephrology, School of Medicine,
at UNC. The two mentoring co-authors were
Drs. Ronald J. Falk of UNC and Dr. Madhu
Mazumdar, chief of the Division of
Biostatistics and Epidemiology in the
Department of Public Health at Weill Cornell
Medical College.
Get scored on your risk for chronic kidney
disease! Find out if you might have silent
chronic kidney disease now. Check each
statement that is true for you. If a
statement is not true or you are not sure,
put a zero. Then add up all the points for a
total.
Age:
-I am between 50 and 59 years of age.
if yes, score 2: ______
-I am between 60 and 69 years of age.
if yes, score 3: ______
-I am 70 years old or older.
if yes, score 4: ______
I am a woman.
if yes, score 1: ______
I had/have anemia.
if yes, score 1: ______
I have high blood pressure.
if yes, score 1: ______
I am diabetic.
if yes, score 1; ______
I have a history of heart attack or stroke.
if yes, score 1: ______
I have a history of congestive heart failure
or heart failure.
if yes, score 1: ______
I have circulation disease in my legs.
if yes, score 1: ______
I have protein in my urine.
if yes, score 1: ______
Total ______
If you scored four or more points, you have
a one in five chance of having chronic
kidney disease. At your next doctor's visit,
a simple blood test should be checked. Only
a professional health-care provider can
determine for sure if you have kidney
disease. If you scored between zero and
three points, you probably do not have
kidney disease now, but at least once a
year, you should take this survey.
For more information, patients may call
(866) 697-6397.
Weill
Cornell Medical College
Weill Cornell Medical College -- located in
New York City -- is committed to excellence
in research, teaching, patient care and the
advancement of the art and science of
medicine.
Weill Cornell, which is a principal academic affiliate of NewYork-Presbyterian
Hospital, offers an innovative curriculum
that integrates the teaching of basic and
clinical sciences, problem-based learning,
office-based preceptorships, and primary
care and doctoring courses. Physicians and
scientists of Weill Cornell Medical College
are engaged in cutting-edge research in such
areas as stem cells, genetics and gene
therapy, geriatrics, neuroscience,
structural biology, cardiovascular medicine,
AIDS, obesity, cancer and psychiatry -- and
continue to delve ever deeper into the
molecular basis of disease in an effort to
unlock the mysteries behind the human body
and the malfunctions that result in serious
medical disorders.
Weill Cornell Medical College is the
birthplace of many medical advances -- from
the development of the Pap test for cervical
cancer to the synthesis of penicillin, the
first successful embryo-biopsy pregnancy and
birth in the U.S., and most recently, the
world's first clinical trial for gene
therapy for Parkinson's disease. Weill
Cornell's Physician Organization includes
650 clinical faculty, who provide the
highest quality of care to their patients.
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