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An expanded nationwide view of chronic kidney disease in Aboriginal Australians

期刊

NEPHROLOGY
卷 21, 期 11, 页码 916-922

出版社

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/nep.12798

关键词

chronic kidney disease; Indigenous Australian; kidney failure; renal replacement therapy

资金

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia [921134, 193316, 320860, 511081]
  2. Kidney Health Australia
  3. Colonial Foundation of Australia
  4. Rio Tinto
  5. AMGEN Australia
  6. NHMRC CKD Centre for Research Excellence [APP1079502]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

We summarize new knowledge that has accrued in recent years on chronic kidney disease (CKD) in Indigenous Australians. CKD refers to all stages of preterminal kidney disease, including end-stage kidney failure (ESKF), whether or not a person receives renal replacement therapy (RRT). Recently recorded rates of ESKF, RRT, non-dialysis CKD hospitalizations and CKD attributed deaths were, respectively, more than sixfold, eightfold, eightfold and threefold those of non-Indigenous Australians, with age adjustment, although all except the RRT rates are still under-enumerated. However, the nationwide average Indigenous incidence rate of RRT appears to have stabilized. The median age of Indigenous people with ESKF was about 30-years less than for non-Indigenous people, and 84% of them received RTT, while only half of non-Indigenous people with ESKF did so. The first-ever (2012) nationwide health survey data showed elevated levels of CKD markers in Indigenous people at the community level. For all CKD parameters, rates among Indigenous people themselves were strikingly correlated with increasing remoteness of residence and socio-economic disadvantage, and there was a female predominance in remote areas. The burden of renal disease in Australian Indigenous people is seriously understated by Global Burden of Disease Mortality methodology, because it employs underlying cause of death only, and because deaths of people on RRT are frequently attributed to non-renal causes. These data give a much expanded view of CKD in Aboriginal people. Methodologic approaches must be remedied for a full appreciation of the burden, costs and outcomes of the disease, to direct appropriate policy development.

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