4.6 Editorial Material

Optimizing the timing of nephrology referral for patients with diabetic kidney disease

Journal

CLINICAL KIDNEY JOURNAL
Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages 5-8

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/ckj/sfaa125

Keywords

diabetes mellitus; diabetic kidney disease; diabetic nephropathy; early referral; multidisciplinary care

Funding

  1. FIS/Fondos FEDER [PI18/01386, PI19/00588, PI19/00815, DTS18/00032]
  2. ERA-PerMed-JTC2018 [KIDNEY ATTACK AC18/00064, PERSTIGAN AC18/00071, ISCIII-RETIC REDinREN RD016/0009]
  3. Sociedad Espanola de Nefrologia, FRIAT, Comunidad de Madrid en Biomedicina [B2017/BMD-3686 CIFRA2-CM]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Despite the decrease in age-standardized rates of diabetes mellitus-related complications, the incidence of advanced chronic kidney disease has not shown a clear reduction. Early detection of diabetic kidney disease is crucial for reducing complications, morbidity, and mortality.
Age-standardized rates of diabetes mellitus (DM)-related complications, such as acute myocardial infarction, stroke or amputations, have decreased in recent years, but this was not associated with a clear reduction of the incidence of advanced chronic kidney disease (CKD) requiring renal replacement therapy. The early detection of diabetic kidney disease (DKD) is a key to reduce complications, morbidity and mortality. Consensus documents and clinical practice guidelines recommend referral of DM patients to nephrology when the estimated glomerular filtration rate falls below 30 mL/min/1.73m(2) or when albuminuria exceeds 300 mg/g urinary creatinine. Conceptually, it strikes as odd that patients with CKD are referred to the specialist caring for the prevention and treatment of CKD only when >70% of the functioning kidney mass has been lost. The increasing global health burden of CKD, driven in large part by DKD, the suboptimal impact of routine care on DKD outcomes as compared with other DM complications, the realization that successful therapy of CKD requires early diagnosis and intervention, the advances in earlier diagnosis of kidney injury and the recent availability of antidiabetic drugs with a renal mechanism of action and lack of hypoglycaemia risk, which additionally are cardio- and nephroprotective, all point towards a paradigm shift in the care for DM patients in which they should be referred earlier to nephrology as part of a coordinated and integrated care approach.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available