中心内血液透析患者与普通人群使用急诊医疗服务情况的比较:加拿大安大略省基于人口的匹配队列研究》。

IF 1.6 Q3 UROLOGY & NEPHROLOGY
Canadian Journal of Kidney Health and Disease Pub Date : 2024-03-04 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1177/20543581241231426
Kyla L Naylor, Marlee Vinegar, Peter G Blake, Sarah Bota, Bin Luo, Amit X Garg, Jane Ip, Angie Yeung, Joanie Gingras, Anas Aziz, Carina Iskander, Phil McFarlane
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:接受维持性血液透析的患者有多种并发症,入院风险很高。然而,人们对中心内血液透析患者使用急诊医疗服务的发生率和费用以及与其他人群的比较情况知之甚少:与匹配的普通人群相比,确定中心内血液透析患者的急诊就诊率、模式和住院费用:设计:基于人群的匹配队列研究:我们使用了加拿大安大略省的链接行政医疗保健数据库:我们纳入了 2010 年 1 月 1 日至 2018 年 12 月 31 日期间接受中心内血液透析的 25 379 名患者(偶发和流行)。患者的出生日期(±2岁)、性别和队列入组日期与普通人群中的101 516人按1:4的比例进行匹配:我们的主要结果是急诊就诊率(允许每人多次就诊)和急诊入院率。我们还评估了全因住院、出院后 30 天内全因再住院、住院时间(包括每人多次就诊)以及这些住院的经济成本:我们列出了急诊科就诊和住院的比率、百分比、中位数(第 25 位和第 75 位百分位数)以及每千人年的发病率。使用资源强度权重乘以每个加权病例的成本,估算出急诊就诊和全因住院的个人医疗成本:结果:与匹配的普通人群相比,接受中心血液透析的患者合并症(如糖尿病)要多得多。在中位随访 1.8 年(第 25、75 百分位数:0.7、3.6)和 5.2 年(2.5、8.4)期间,80%(n = 20 309)接受中心内血液透析的患者至少去过一次急诊室,而在匹配的普通人群中,这一比例为 56%(n = 56 452)。考虑到每人多次就诊,接受中心内血液透析的患者的急诊就诊率为每千人年 2274 人次(95% 置信区间 [CI]:2263, 2286),几乎是匹配的普通人群(每千人年 471 人次;95% CI:469, 473)的 5 倍。中心内血液透析患者的急诊入院率和全因入院率是相匹配的普通人群的 7 倍多(急诊入院率:786 人/每千人年 vs 101 人/每千人年):786 vs 101/1000人-年;全因住院率:1056 vs 139/1000人-年:1056 对 139/1000)。中心内血液透析患者每年全因住院天数的中位数为 4.0 天(0,16.5 天),而匹配的普通人群为 0 天(0,0.5 天)。在中心内血液透析人群中,每名患者每年的急诊就诊费用约为匹配普通人群的 5.5 倍,而中心内血液透析人群的住院费用约为匹配普通人群的 11 倍(急诊就诊费用:1153 加元对 2020 加元):1153 加元对 209 加元;住院费用:局限性:局限性:外部普遍性,我们无法确定急诊就诊和住院治疗是否可以预防:结论:接受中心内血液透析的患者在急性期的医疗使用率很高。这些结果加深了我们对中心内血液透析人群的疾病负担和相关费用的了解,强调了改善急性期治疗效果的必要性,并有助于医疗能力规划。在控制了患者的合并症后,还需要进行更多的研究来解决住院风险问题:由于这是一项基于人群的匹配队列研究,而非临床试验,因此不适用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Comparison of Acute Health Care Utilization Between Patients Receiving In-Center Hemodialysis and the General Population: A Population-Based Matched Cohort Study From Ontario, Canada.

Background: Patients receiving maintenance hemodialysis have multiple comorbidities and are at high risk of presenting to the hospital. However, the incidence and cost of acute health care utilization in the in-center hemodialysis population and how this compares with other populations is poorly understood.

Objective: To determine the rate, pattern, and cost of emergency department visits and hospitalizations in patients receiving in-center hemodialysis compared with a matched general population.

Design: Population-based matched cohort study.

Setting: We used linked administrative health care databases from Ontario, Canada.

Patients: We included 25 379 patients (incident and prevalent) receiving in-center hemodialysis between January 1, 2010, and December 31, 2018. Patients were matched on birth date (±2 years), sex, and cohort entry date using a 1:4 ratio to 101 516 individuals from the general population.

Measurements: Our primary outcomes were emergency department visits (allowing for multiple visits per individual) and hospital admissions from the emergency department. We also assessed all-cause hospitalizations, all-cause readmissions within 30 days of discharge from the original hospitalization, length of stay for hospital admissions (including multiple visits per individual), and the financial cost of these admissions.

Methods: We presented the rate, percentage, median (25th, 75th percentiles), and incidence rate per 1000 person-years for emergency department visits and hospitalizations. Individual-level health care costs for emergency department visits and all-cause hospitalization were estimated using resource intensity weights multiplied by the cost per weighted case.

Results: Patients receiving in-center hemodialysis had substantially more comorbidities (eg, diabetes) than the matched general population. Eighty percent (n = 20 309) of patients receiving in-center hemodialysis had at least 1 emergency department visit compared with 56% (n = 56 452) of individuals in the matched general population, over a median follow-up of 1.8 years (25th, 75th percentiles: 0.7, 3.6) and 5.2 (2.5, 8.4) years, respectively. The incidence rate of emergency department visits, allowing for multiple visits per individual, was 2274 per 1000 person-years (95% confidence interval [CI]: 2263, 2286) for patients receiving in-center hemodialysis, which was almost 5 times as high as the matched general population (471 per 1000 person-years; 95% CI: 469, 473). The rate of hospital admissions from the emergency department and the rate of all-cause hospital admissions in the in-center hemodialysis population was more than 7 times as high as the matched general population (hospital admissions from the emergency department: 786 vs 101 per 1000 person-years; all-cause hospital admissions: 1056 vs 139 per 1000 person-years). The median number of all-cause hospitalization days per patient year was 4.0 (0, 16.5) in the in-center hemodialysis population compared with 0 (0, 0.5) in the matched general population. The cost per patient-year for emergency department visits in the in-center hemodialysis population was approximately 5.5 times as high as the matched general population while the cost of hospitalizations in the in-center hemodialysis population was approximately 11 times as high as the matched general population (emergency department visits: CAN$ 1153 vs CAN$ 209; hospitalizations: CAN$ 21 151 vs CAN$ 1873 [all costs in 2023 CAN$]).

Limitations: External generalizability and we could not determine whether emergency department visits and hospitalizations were preventable.

Conclusions: Patients receiving in-center hemodialysis have high acute health care utilization. These results improve our understanding of the burden of disease and the associated costs in the in-center hemodialysis population, highlight the need to improve acute outcomes, and can aid health care capacity planning. Additional research is needed to address the risk of hospitalization after controlling for patient comorbidities.

Trial registration: This is not applicable as this is a population-based matched cohort study and not a clinical trial.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
5.90%
发文量
84
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: Canadian Journal of Kidney Health and Disease, the official journal of the Canadian Society of Nephrology, is an open access, peer-reviewed online journal that encourages high quality submissions focused on clinical, translational and health services delivery research in the field of chronic kidney disease, dialysis, kidney transplantation and organ donation. Our mandate is to promote and advocate for kidney health as it impacts national and international communities. Basic science, translational studies and clinical studies will be peer reviewed and processed by an Editorial Board comprised of geographically diverse Canadian and international nephrologists, internists and allied health professionals; this Editorial Board is mandated to ensure highest quality publications.
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