QUESTION: This study aimed to describe the routine clinical management of patients with NDD-CKD and anaemia following ESA initiation, in Germany, Spain and the UK.
METHODS: This was a non-interventional cohort study of adults with NDD-CKD stages 3b–5 diagnosed with anaemia (haemoglobin [Hb] <13.0 g/dL [males] or <12.0 g/dL [females]), who began ESA treatment Jan 2015–Dec 2015. Data for ≤24 months after ESA initiation were extracted from medical records.
RESULTS: 848 patient records (Germany, 211; Spain, 430; UK, 207) were included. Patient characteristics and management patterns are shown in the Table. Hb levels were recorded at ESA initiation for most (91.3%) patients and averaged 9.8 ± 1.0 g/dL for the total cohort (Table). Mean ± SD estimated glomerular filtration rate at ESA initiation was 28.0 ± 10.4 ml/min/1.73m2. Across countries, 72–88% of patients received ESAs at home. The mean ± SD duration of therapy (at the time of data collection) was 41.2 ± 18.2 months, and the median weekly dose of short-acting and long-acting ESAs was 3.238 IU and 20 μg, respectively. During their initial course of therapy, three-quarters of patients had either an increase or decrease in ESA dose. Less than 10% of patients switched ESAs, while approximately one-third discontinued within 2 years of initiation. At 3 and 6 months post-ESA initiation, only 64.7% of the sample had a documented Hb measurement despite continuing ESA treatment; and this reduced to 60.0% by 12 months after initiation. The Hb target was maintained by 88.7%, 74.6% and 49.4% of patients at 3, 6 and 12 months, respectively. Mean ferritin levels were 167.3 ng/mL at initiation and 198.7 ng/mL at 12 months (among the 85% and 48% of the sample, respectively, with recorded data). Mean transferrin saturation was 22.1% at initiation and 25.6% at 12 months (among the 67% and 38%, respectively, with recorded data). Approximately three-quarters of patients (77.3%) received iron therapy concomitantly with ESA treatment; in the UK, most received IV iron, while in Germany and Spain, a majority received oral iron. Blood transfusions were more common in Spain (24.2%) than in Germany (5.1%) or the UK (8.4%). Approximately one-fifth of patients required dialysis.
CONCLUSION: Initiation of ESAs to treat anaemia among patients with NDD-CKD in Germany, Spain and the UK followed current guidelines. However, recommendations to regularly monitor Hb were not routinely followed or were poorly documented. As most patients with NDD-CKD anaemia were treated at home, a simple treatment regimen oral therapies may be of benefit to these patients.
Fliser D, Portoles J, Houghton K, Ainsworth C, Blogg M, Lorenzo MM. Treatment structures and resource use in non-dialysis-dependent CKD patients (NDD-CKD) with renal anemia: a retrospective analysis. Poster presented at the Kongress fur NepHROlogie 2021 13th Annual Meeting; September 23, 2021.
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