240 likes | 517 Views
The National Kidney Foundation’s Kidney Early Evaluation Program TM “ The Greater New York Experience”. Ellen H. Yoshiuchi, MPS Division Program Director National Kidney Foundation Serving Greater New York. Kidney Early Evaluation Program TM. www.keeponline.org. KEEP Objectives.
E N D
The National Kidney Foundation’s Kidney Early Evaluation ProgramTM“The Greater New YorkExperience” Ellen H. Yoshiuchi, MPS Division Program Director National Kidney Foundation Serving Greater New York
Kidney EarlyEvaluation ProgramTM www.keeponline.org
KEEP Objectives • Identify those at risk for Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) using inclusion criteria: • Hypertension • Diabetes • Family history in first order relatives of hypertension, diabetes or chronic kidney disease • To empower individuals to prevent or delay the onset of CKD or renal failure through education and appropriate disease management
Chronic Kidney Disease Is a Public Health Problem! • 26 million Americans have CKD. Most don’t know it. • The devastating consequences of CKD are End Stage Renal Disease (ESRD), which requires dialysis or transplantation, or cardiovascular disease & death. • Early screening, diagnosis, and treatment should delay or prevent death and ESRD. • CKD is a worldwide public health problem.
An estimated 1.2 million New Yorkers are affected by CKD. The Center for Disease Control (CDC) reports a 116% increase in CKD in NYS over the past decade. In cost related to CKD, NYS is the 4th highest state at $2.9 billion. 7,300 New Yorkers will advance to End Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) annually. The diabetic CKD prevalence rate has increased from 6.2% to 7.6% from 2000 to 2006. Primary Causes of ESRD Diabetes 40.5% Hypertension 24% New York State Impact
KEEP OVERVIEW • KEEP is afree public health screening program. • It was initiated in New York City by the National Kidney Foundation in August of 2000. • Screenings are held in all areas of the US by local National Kidney Foundation divisions or affiliates. • Over 160,000 people have been screened to date. • Visit www.KEEPonline.orgfor more information.
Who Should Participate In KEEP? Anyone age 18 or older with one or more of the following: • History of diabetes • History of high blood pressure • Family history in first order relativesof diabetes, high blood pressure and/or kidney disease. (KEEP is not recommended for anyone on dialysis or for anyone who has had a kidney transplant.)
Six Screening Stations • Station One – Registration: Participant receives paperwork packet • Station Two – Screening Questionnaire & Informed Consent: Filled out by a professional volunteer • Station Three – Physical Measurements: Height, weight, waist circumference, BMI & blood pressure • Station Four – Urine & Blood Testing • Station Five – Clinician Consultation: Interview with a physician, nurse practitioner or physician assistant • Station Six – Screening Review: Participants receive copy of informed consent & test results
KEEP Screening Evaluation Medical history DM HTN CVD CKD Blood pressure Height and weight Waist circumference Body mass index (BMI) Blood glucose measurement Hemoglobin A1c (select participants) Serum creatinine Hemoglobin • Albumin to Creatinine ratio • eGFR-Estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate • Lipid testing • Total Cholesterol • HDL/LDL/Triglycerides • For eGFR<60 ml/min, Reflex Testing: • Calcium • Phosphorus • PTH-Parathyroid hormone
Estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate (eGFR) Calculated based on serum creatinine test result, age, gender and ethnicity. Determines kidney function. Results sent to participant within 4 weeks, with a comprehensive report.
Blood Test: Hemoglobin Used to determine anemia, which can be due to advanced Stages 3 to 5 or even low levels of kidney function. KDOQI Classification of Anemia in CKD Women <12.0 g/dl Anemia Men <13.5 g/dl Anemia AJKD May 2006
Reflex Tests The following tests are conducted on the blood specimens of KEEP participants with an eGFR below 60: Calcium Phosphorus PTH These tests assess bone health. Abnormal results may be related to kidney disease.
KEEP in Greater New York 5 Years/62 Screenings 2/1/2004 to 6/30/2009 • 4,944 attended the screenings. • 4,356 met inclusion criteria & completed the screening. • Breakdown by gender Male: 33.54% (1461) Female: 66.21% (2884)
Of the 4,356 who learned of a new problem… • 2,538 learned they may have kidney disease: 58.26% • 465 learned they may have diabetes: 10.67% • 555 learned they may have hypertension: 12.74% • 855 learned they may have high cholesterol: 19.63%
Of the 847 individuals who reported values for all 9 tests… Values outside the normal range: • 23.14%--1 value • 25.27%--2 values • 20.54%--3 values • 9.45%--4 values • 78% of the 847 showed values outside the normal range in 1 to 4 values.
All Asian • 1,276 participants • 1,056 met criteria • 399 male • 656 female • 1 NA • Asian 96% • Caucasian & African American 4%
All Chinese: 95% Chinese800 participants/702 met criteria • 252 Male: 35.90% • 449 Female: 63.96% • Individuals who were aware of a pre-existing condition: • 50—kidney disease: 7.12% • 230—high cholesterol: 32.76% • 147—diabetes: 20.94% • 282—hypertension: 40.17%
Individuals who learned that they may have a new problem… • Diabetes 13.82% (97) • HTN 10.68% (75) • Cholesterol 18.66% (131) • CKD 58.83% (413)
Of the 103 individuals who reported values for all 9 tests… Values outside the normal range: • 24 individuals 23.30%--1 value • 27 individuals 26.21%--2 values • 17 individuals 16.50%--3 values • 6 individuals 5.83%--4 values • 2 individuals 1.94%--5 values • 4 individuals 3.88%--6 values
Values Outside the Norm • 80 individuals out of 103… reported one of more values outside the normal range • 12 reported with 4 to 6 values outside the normal range