The quality of the treatment of diabetics in kidney failure in Germany

2008 
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: In recent years there has been a rapid increase in the number of dialysis-dependent diabetics in Germany. Survival on dialysis is not satisfactory and damage acquired in the preterminal stage of renal failure is thought to play an important role. Late referral to a nephrologist and insufficient quality of medical management are thought to contribute importantly to poor outcome. This hypothesis was evaluated in the present study. PATIENTS AND METHOD: The data of all 173 diabetic patients (16 with type 1, 157 with type 2 diabetes, 90 men, 83 women, mean age 63.3 [31-95] years), who had been referred in 1996 for the first time to five renal units, were retrospectively assessed using a structured protocol. RESULTS: Patients were usually referred in advanced renal failure (median creatinine clearance 29 ml/min, range 1-216) with insufficient control of systolic (170 [120-260] mmHg) and diastolic blood pressure (90 [60-180] mmHg), insufficient antihypertensive therapy (without treatment 32 of 173 patients; median number of classes of antihypertensive agents used 2 [range 1-6]; ACE inhibitors 79 of 173 patients), high HbA1c (7.9 [4.9-15.7]%) and LDL cholesterol (176 [67-307] mg/dl). Immediate dialysis was required in 45 patients. CONCLUSION: The data document insufficient quality of treatment and late incorporation of a nephrologist into the medical team involved in the care of diabetic patients. Changes in the structure of diabetes care are necessary to improve treatment quality.
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