Editorial Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

US Renal Data System 2017 Annual Data Report: Epidemiology of Kidney Disease in the United States

2018; Elsevier BV; Volume: 71; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1053/j.ajkd.2018.01.002

ISSN

1523-6838

Autores

Rajiv Saran, Bruce Robinson, Kevin C. Abbott, Lawrence Y. Agodoa, Nicole M. Bhave, Jennifer L. Bragg‐Gresham, Rajesh Balkrishnan, Xue Dietrich, Ashley Eckard, Paul W. Eggers, Abduzhappar Gaipov, Daniel L. Gillen, Debbie S. Gipson, Susan M. Hailpern, Yoshio N. Hall, Yun Han, Kevin He, William H. Herman, Michael Heung, Richard A. Hirth, David W. Hutton, Steven J. Jacobsen, Yan Jin, Kamyar Kalantar‐Zadeh, Alissa Kapke, Csaba P. Kövesdy, Danielle C. Lavallee, Janet Leslie, Keith McCullough, Zubin J. Modi, Miklos Z. Molnar, Maria E. Montez‐Rath, Hamid Moradi, Hal Morgenstern, Purna Mukhopadhyay, Brahmajee Nallamothu, Danh V. Nguyen, Keith C. Norris, Ann M. O’Hare, Yoshitsugu Obi, Christina Park, Jeffrey Pearson, Ronald L. Pisoni, Praveen K. Potukuchi, Panduranga S. Rao, Kaitlyn Repeck, Connie M. Rhee, Jillian Schrager, Douglas E. Schaubel, David T. Selewski, Sally F. Shaw, Jiaxiao Shi, Monica Shieu, John J. Sim, Melissa Soohoo, Diane Steffick, Elani Streja, Keiichi Sumida, Manjula Kurella Tamura, Anca Tilea, Lan Tong, Dongyu Wang, Mia Wang, Kenneth J. Woodside, Xin Xin, Maggie Yin, Amy S. You, Hui Zhou, Vahakn B. Shahinian,

Tópico(s)

Dialysis and Renal Disease Management

Resumo

The US Renal Data System (USRDS) is the largest and most comprehensive national end-stage renal disease (ESRD) and chronic kidney disease (CKD) surveillance system in the world. Supported by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) at the National Institutes of Health, the USRDS Coordinating Center is operated by the University of Michigan at the Kidney Epidemiology and Cost Center (KECC), in partnership with Arbor Research Collaborative for Health, in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Trends in the prevalence of CKD and ESRD are important for health care policy and planning. The prevalence of earlier stages of CKD, while relatively stable at 14.8%, implies that an estimated 30 million American adults have CKD, with millions of others at increased risk. In 2015, there were 124,111 new cases of ESRD reported, with a total of nearly 500,000 patients receiving maintenance dialysis treatments and well over 200,000 living with a kidney transplant. The cost to care for patients with CKD remains significant. In 2015, for Medicare beneficiaries with kidney disease alone, the total spending was nearly $100 billion. This included over $64 billion in spending for all Medicare beneficiaries who have CKD and another $34 billion for beneficiaries with ESRD. In sharp contrast to the high burden and cost is the low awareness about the condition among patients with kidney disease, especially those in CKD Stages 1 to 3. Noteworthy was the decline of approximately 41.6% in the 1-year ESRD patient mortality among the 0- to 4-year-old age group over the past decade. Also noted for the first time was a decrease in the kidney transplant waiting list, by 2.3%. This is likely a result of recent changes in the kidney allocation system. We hope researchers, practitioners, and policy makers will gain valuable insights by fully exploring these and many other patterns of US kidney disease in this year’s USRDS annual report. Erratum Regarding “US Renal Data System 2017 Annual Data Report: Epidemiology of Kidney Disease in the United States” (Am J Kidney Dis. 2018;71[3][suppl 1]:Svii,S1-S676)American Journal of Kidney DiseasesVol. 71Issue 4PreviewThe March 2018 supplement to AJKD, the US Renal Data System 2017 Annual Data Report, contained an error in the author list. Nicole Bhave, MD, was erroneously omitted as an author when the supplement was initially published. Her name should have appeared between the fourth author, Lawrence Y.C. Agodoa, MD, and the fifth (now sixth) author, Jennifer Bragg-Gresham, PhD. The author list has been corrected in the HTML and PDF versions of the supplement as of March 7, 2018. Full-Text PDF

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