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Clinical outcomes and performance indicators of patients with kidney failure and acute kidney injuries in ASEAN countries
Author(s) -
Tan Jackson,
Liew Adrian,
Koh David
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
nephrology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.752
H-Index - 61
eISSN - 1440-1797
pISSN - 1320-5358
DOI - 10.1111/nep.14070
Subject(s) - medicine , peritoneal dialysis , incidence (geometry) , acute kidney injury , hemodialysis , dialysis , kidney disease , population , renal replacement therapy , environmental health , physics , optics
This review article reports clinical outcomes and performance indicators of patients with kidney failure (KF) and acute kidney injuries (AKI) in Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) countries. Methodology Association of South East Asian Nations data, segregated by income status, from national registries and literature were collated, compared and benchmarked against international references. Results The national incidence and prevalence of treated KF ranged from 172 to 479 per million population (pmp) and 36–2255 pmp, respectively. Brunei (79%), Malaysia (66%) and Singapore (66%) had world‐leading proportions of diabetes‐related KF. Hemodialysis (HD), Peritoneal Dialysis (PD) and transplant accounted for 68–100%, 0–27% and 0–18% of all KF replacement therapy, respectively. Transplant patient survival was superior with 90%–93% at 5 years and 71%–90% at 10 years, compared to PD (44%–54%) and HD (53–64%) at 5 years. Higher‐income countries were able to achieve good anemia control, HD and PD adequacy targets, while usage of arteriovenous fistula in HD varied from 70% to 85%. Acute Kidney Injury rates ranged from 24.2% to 49.2% of high‐dependency admissions. Lower incidences of PD peritonitis and HD catheter‐related Bloodstream Infections; and PD‐favouring quality‐of‐life were evident in higher‐income countries. Conclusion Association of South East Asian Nations has a challenging burden of kidney disease, with extremely high incidence, prevalence, DM‐related KF and AKI rates. The magnitude of the prevailing problem calls for the creation of a regional society under the auspices of ASEAN with a shared perspective of universal, equitable and charitable access to quality renal care; consistent with the founding premises and healthcare initiatives of ASEAN.

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