KIDNEY
DISEASE: THE UNAPPRECIATED DISEASE?
BY
JAMES MYERS
Is it
possible that the seriousness of kidney disease is unappreciated and underfunded? The 9th leading cause of death in
the United States seems to remain a mystery to the general public and our
lawmakers. The evidence seems to suggest
that on World Kidney Day 2015, we need to take a hard look at how kidney
disease awareness is promoted, both to the general public and to Congress. The
numbers are staggering:
· In
our population of 73 million Americans, 1 in 3 is at risk to develop chronic
kidney disease(CKD);
· 26
million Americans current have CKD, but most do not know it;
· 2.9
million Medicare Patients have CKD, but have not yet suffered total renal
failure;
· 636,905
Americans have suffered total renal failure;
· 115,000
Americans per year are diagnosed with End Stage Renal Failure;
· 450,602
of us are currently on dialysis;
· Only
186,303 Americans live with a transplant;
· 88,686
Americans die every year from renal failure;
· Only
15,416 Americans received a lifesaving transplant in 2013;
· As
of February 20, 2015, 101,603 kidney patients were waiting on a transplant list
for a new kidney;
· 12
people die every day while on the list, waiting for a kidney transplant;
· 38%
of ESRD patients had a primary diagnosis of diabetes, the leading cause of ESRD;
· 25%
of ESRD patients had a primary diagnosis of hypertension, the second leading
cause of ESRD;
· 33%
of ESRD patients were cared for by a nephrologist the year prior to their
kidney failure;
· 75.5%
of New ESRD patients apply for Medicare;
· Kidney
disease occurs in Americans more often than lung and breast cancer combined;
· Most
striking is according to the Kidney Cares Partners, the incidence of kidney
disease is expected to double within the next decade!
The costs of kidney disease alone should attract more
attention than they do:
· $58
billion is the Annual Medicare costs to treat people with CKD;
· $29
billion is the Annual cost of the Medicare ESRD program;
· $125,967
is what Medicare spends for kidney transplant per patient in the first year;
· $86,592
is what Medicare spends on a dialysis patient, per-year;
· $24,438
is what Medicare spends for a functioning transplant patient, per-year (after
the first year);
· $3,599
Medicare Part B spending on immunosuppressive drugs, per year.
Yet according to
kidney scholars, CKD seems to fall below the radar.
“Because chronic kidney disease and end-stage
renal disease are not in the public consciousness (to the level of cancer, ALS
or heart disease), many people remain unaware of the need to do basic screening
for kidney disease and its chief risk factors -- diabetes and hypertension.
This lack of awareness is common even though blood and urine screening tests
are inexpensive, widely available and simple to perform.”
A
recent study published in the American Journal of Nephrology found that only 6
percent of the 2,615 adults interviewed with abnormal kidney function were
aware of having the disease.
Why are so many people unaware that they have
an incurable, but manageable disease? Is because of the slow progression of
kidney disease? The inability to appreciate the function and importance kidney
disease plays in our overall health?
Late referrals to expert nephrologists? Lack of visits to a primary care
physician?
The
experts seem to traditionally give voice to these reasons, but also point to a
lack of funding and study by government agencies on this subject:
· The
National Institutes of Health -- the leading funder of medical research in the
United States -- spent nearly $7.8 billion to support research on all cancers
in 2013, but spent only $551 million for kidney disease (or $30 per patient) in
2013;
· The estimated 2015 NIH budget increased to
more than $8 billion for all cancers, but remained at $551 million for kidney
disease;
· Experts have
stated, “The amount of research funding for kidney disease seems
disproportionately low compared to the high prevalence of chronic kidney
disease, and its costs… As
the spending on kidney disease continues to rise, greater emphasis should be
placed on prevention of disease progression and optimizing management of
end-stage renal disease. That includes early referral for kidney
transplantation or home hemodialysis, as governing bodies, foundations, and the
United States Renal Data System 2014 have suggested.”
My
feverant wish for World Kidney Day, 2015, is that all members of the kidney
community support The Chronic Kidney Disease Improvement and Research Act and petition
the Secretary of Health and Human Services in the upcoming 21st Chronic
Diseases section of the 21st Century Cures final bill “to conduct a
longitudinal study in several states to improve outcomes of kidney patients
through better understanding by primary practitioners of the risks of disease
progression, and proper diagnosis and management of people with CKD. The study
should be funded and conducted through the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, which conducts a kidney disease surveillance program, but has
little funding to expand the program to study outcomes for patients.”
Sources: Kidney Disease by the Numbers, National
Kidney Foundation, updated for 2015, Gordon and Fischer, Save Money, Save
Lives: Why the Silence on the Fiscal and Fatal Consequences of Kidney Disease
Matters, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/elisa-gordon/kidney-disease-funding_b_6717504.html
(February 25, 2015); 2015 Kidney Patient Summit, Issue Briefs, Chronic Kidney
Disease Detection, Diagnosis and Management, National Kidney Foundation (2015).
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