Melanie R Weltman, Linda-Marie U Lavenburg, Zhuoheng Han, Alaa A Alghwiri, Mitra Mosslemi, Bruce L Rollman, Gary S Fischer, Thomas D Nolin, Jonathan G Yabes, Manisha Jhamb
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Gaps in guideline-concordant care for chronic kidney disease (CKD) lead to poor outcomes. The Kidney Coordinated HeAlth Management Partnership (K-CHAMP) cluster randomized trial tested the effect of a population health management intervention versus usual care on CKD progression and evidence-based care delivery in the primary care setting.
Methods: K-CHAMP included adults aged 18-85 years with eGFR <60 mL/min/1.73m2 and moderate-high risk of CKD progression who were not seeing a nephrologist. The multi-faceted intervention included nephrology e-consult, pharmacist-led medication management, and patient education. In this post-hoc analysis, we evaluate the effectiveness of K-CHAMP on guideline-concordant care processes (blood pressure and glycemic control, annual albuminuria testing), and medication exposure days (ACEi/ARB, moderate-high intensity statin, SGLT-2i, GLP-1RA). Given multiplicity of outcomes, Benjamini-Hochberg method was used to control false discovery rate (FDR).
Results: All 1,596 (754 intervention, 842 usual care) enrolled patients (mean age 74±9 years, eGFR 37±8 mL/min/1.73m2, 928 (58%) female, 127 (8%) Black) were analyzed. After a median 17-month follow-up, intervention arm patients had significantly higher exposure days per year to SGLT-2i (56 vs 32 days, relative benefit 1.72, 95% CI 1.14-2.30) and GLP-1RA (78 vs 29 days, relative benefit 2.65, 95% CI 1.59-3.71) compared to usual care in adjusted analysis. At study initiation in 2019, similar proportion of patients were prescribed SGLT-2i and/or GLP-1RA in intervention and control arm (8% vs 6% respectively, rate ratio 1.23, 95% CI 0-2.99), but by 2022, prescription of these medications was significantly higher in intervention arm (44% vs 27% respectively, rate ratio 1.63, 95% CI 1.32-1.94). There was no significant difference in any process measures or exposure days to ACEi/ARB in patients with albuminuria or moderate-high intensity statin.
Conclusions: K-CHAMP was effective in accelerating implementation of SGLT-2i and GLP-1RA but did not increase ACEi/ARB in patients with albuminuria or moderate-high intensity statin use, or improve blood pressure control, glycemic control, or albuminuria testing in individuals with CKD in the primary care setting.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of the American Society of Nephrology (JASN) stands as the preeminent kidney journal globally, offering an exceptional synthesis of cutting-edge basic research, clinical epidemiology, meta-analysis, and relevant editorial content. Representing a comprehensive resource, JASN encompasses clinical research, editorials distilling key findings, perspectives, and timely reviews.
Editorials are skillfully crafted to elucidate the essential insights of the parent article, while JASN actively encourages the submission of Letters to the Editor discussing recently published articles. The reviews featured in JASN are consistently erudite and comprehensive, providing thorough coverage of respective fields. Since its inception in July 1990, JASN has been a monthly publication.
JASN publishes original research reports and editorial content across a spectrum of basic and clinical science relevant to the broad discipline of nephrology. Topics covered include renal cell biology, developmental biology of the kidney, genetics of kidney disease, cell and transport physiology, hemodynamics and vascular regulation, mechanisms of blood pressure regulation, renal immunology, kidney pathology, pathophysiology of kidney diseases, nephrolithiasis, clinical nephrology (including dialysis and transplantation), and hypertension. Furthermore, articles addressing healthcare policy and care delivery issues relevant to nephrology are warmly welcomed.