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Diabetic nephropathy and chronic kidney disease at a busy diabetes clinic: A study of Outpatient Care and suggestions for improved care pathways at a subspecialty specialist diabetic renal clinic
Prior to establishing a specialist diabetic renal clinic in our unit, we studied across 12 months all 1845 patients attending one of our diabetes clinics with a serum creatinine >150μmol/l. Diabetic control was examined along with renal function and cardiovascular risk using current audit standar...
Autores principales: | , , , |
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Formato: | Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
The Ulster Medical Society
2010
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2993143/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21116420 |
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author | Graham, UM Magee, GM Hunter, SJ Atkinson, AB |
author_facet | Graham, UM Magee, GM Hunter, SJ Atkinson, AB |
author_sort | Graham, UM |
collection | PubMed |
description | Prior to establishing a specialist diabetic renal clinic in our unit, we studied across 12 months all 1845 patients attending one of our diabetes clinics with a serum creatinine >150μmol/l. Diabetic control was examined along with renal function and cardiovascular risk using current audit standards. 74 such patients were identified (male:female 54:20 mean HbA1c 7.8% (sd±1.45) and age 64.2years (±12.8). 30 patients had creatinine >200μmol/l and 15 >250μmol/l. Using the chronic kidney disease classification, 33, 28 and 6 patients were in groups III, IV and V with 7 patients undergoing renal replacement therapy. 65% of patients met JBS2 audit standards of blood pressure using a mean of 2.93 agents (sd±1.43). Ace-inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers were used in 81% and 81% were on regular antiplatelet or anticoagulant therapy. Audit standard for total cholesterol and LDL were met in 89% and 97% of patients respectively. All patients identified in our study were in CKD class III-V and therefore we considered also alternative inclusion criteria. 136 patients had a urinary ACR ≥ 30mg/mmol. Using this and/or the serum creatinine level above identified 197 patients from the clinic. This study shows that measurement of serum creatinine alone is not sufficiently sensitive but extended criteria identified a 10% subgroup who will now be offered detailed assessments and intensified therapies at a subspecialty in-house renal clinic. eGFR has recently been added to our computerised proforma and will enable us to further refine inclusion criteria. |
format | Text |
id | pubmed-2993143 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2010 |
publisher | The Ulster Medical Society |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-29931432010-11-29 Diabetic nephropathy and chronic kidney disease at a busy diabetes clinic: A study of Outpatient Care and suggestions for improved care pathways at a subspecialty specialist diabetic renal clinic Graham, UM Magee, GM Hunter, SJ Atkinson, AB Ulster Med J Paper Prior to establishing a specialist diabetic renal clinic in our unit, we studied across 12 months all 1845 patients attending one of our diabetes clinics with a serum creatinine >150μmol/l. Diabetic control was examined along with renal function and cardiovascular risk using current audit standards. 74 such patients were identified (male:female 54:20 mean HbA1c 7.8% (sd±1.45) and age 64.2years (±12.8). 30 patients had creatinine >200μmol/l and 15 >250μmol/l. Using the chronic kidney disease classification, 33, 28 and 6 patients were in groups III, IV and V with 7 patients undergoing renal replacement therapy. 65% of patients met JBS2 audit standards of blood pressure using a mean of 2.93 agents (sd±1.43). Ace-inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers were used in 81% and 81% were on regular antiplatelet or anticoagulant therapy. Audit standard for total cholesterol and LDL were met in 89% and 97% of patients respectively. All patients identified in our study were in CKD class III-V and therefore we considered also alternative inclusion criteria. 136 patients had a urinary ACR ≥ 30mg/mmol. Using this and/or the serum creatinine level above identified 197 patients from the clinic. This study shows that measurement of serum creatinine alone is not sufficiently sensitive but extended criteria identified a 10% subgroup who will now be offered detailed assessments and intensified therapies at a subspecialty in-house renal clinic. eGFR has recently been added to our computerised proforma and will enable us to further refine inclusion criteria. The Ulster Medical Society 2010-05 /pmc/articles/PMC2993143/ /pubmed/21116420 Text en © The Ulster Medical Society, 2010 |
spellingShingle | Paper Graham, UM Magee, GM Hunter, SJ Atkinson, AB Diabetic nephropathy and chronic kidney disease at a busy diabetes clinic: A study of Outpatient Care and suggestions for improved care pathways at a subspecialty specialist diabetic renal clinic |
title | Diabetic nephropathy and chronic kidney disease at a busy diabetes clinic: A study of Outpatient Care and suggestions for improved care pathways at a subspecialty specialist diabetic renal clinic |
title_full | Diabetic nephropathy and chronic kidney disease at a busy diabetes clinic: A study of Outpatient Care and suggestions for improved care pathways at a subspecialty specialist diabetic renal clinic |
title_fullStr | Diabetic nephropathy and chronic kidney disease at a busy diabetes clinic: A study of Outpatient Care and suggestions for improved care pathways at a subspecialty specialist diabetic renal clinic |
title_full_unstemmed | Diabetic nephropathy and chronic kidney disease at a busy diabetes clinic: A study of Outpatient Care and suggestions for improved care pathways at a subspecialty specialist diabetic renal clinic |
title_short | Diabetic nephropathy and chronic kidney disease at a busy diabetes clinic: A study of Outpatient Care and suggestions for improved care pathways at a subspecialty specialist diabetic renal clinic |
title_sort | diabetic nephropathy and chronic kidney disease at a busy diabetes clinic: a study of outpatient care and suggestions for improved care pathways at a subspecialty specialist diabetic renal clinic |
topic | Paper |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2993143/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21116420 |
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