Abstract

Abstract Background and Aims Despite huge efforts to accomplish equitable access to high-quality healthcare, large disparities in kidney care delivery remain across Europe. Economic factors are considered to be the driving force behind differences in access to kidney replacement therapy (KRT), with lower access in lower-income countries. There is a sparsity of epidemiological data on KRT in Central and Eastern Europe. Therefore, we aimed to examine time trends in incidence and prevalence of KRT in Central and Eastern Europe from 2010 to 2021. Method We included incidence and prevalence data on patients starting or receiving KRT between the years 2010 and 2021 from 18 Central and Eastern European countries participating in the ERA Registry. Albania, Belarus, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Latvia, Lithuania, Northern Macedonia, Poland, Russia, Slovakia, Turkey, and Ukraine provided data on aggregated level, whereas Bosnia and Herzegovina, Estonia, Greece, Romania and Serbia provided individual patient data. General population data were reported by the collaborating registries or extracted from Eurostat. Most registries had full coverage of the general population. We expressed incidence and prevalence per million population (pmp) and time trends were studied with Joinpoint regression and expressed as Annual Percentage Changes (APCs). Results Incidence of KRT varied largely across Central and Eastern European countries (Fig. 1). In 2010, it ranged from 23.0 pmp in Ukraine to 190.5 pmp in Greece, and in 2021 from 53.0 pmp in Ukraine to 283.0 pmp in Cyprus. In 7 countries the KRT incidence increased significantly between 2010 and 2021 (APC; 95% CI): Albania (+8%; 5-10%), Cyprus (+6%; 4-9%), Greece (+3%; 3-4%), North Macedonia (+4%; 3-5%), Romania (+3%; 1-5%), Russia (+9%; 7-10%), and Ukraine (+7%; 4-9%). Serbia was the only country in which KRT incidence decreased: from 188.6 pmp in 2010 to 65.9 pmp in 2021 (APC: −8%; −10 to −6%), whereas for other countries KRT incidence remained stable over the study period. Except for the Baltic States, the age of incident KRT patients increased in all countries during the study period, also reflected by a temporal increase in the proportion of patients initiating KRT at ages of 65 years and older. The KRT prevalence also showed large variation across countries, ranging from 123.6 pmp to 1080.0 pmp in 2010 in Ukraine and Greece (Fig. 1). In 2021 it ranged from 303.6 pmp (Ukraine) to 1445.4 pmp (Greece). In all, but five countries (Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Czech Republic, North Macedonia, and Serbia) the prevalence of KRT increased annually with 2-9% between 2010 and 2021. This increase was mainly driven by an increase in prevalent patients with a functioning kidney transplant. If, however, the period prior to the COVID-19 pandemic was considered (2010 to 2019) there was also an increasing trend in the KRT prevalence for Bosnia and Herzegovina, Czech Republic, and North Macedonia. In all countries, prevalent KRT patients became older during recent years. Conclusion Large variation exists in the number of incident and prevalent patients treated with KRT across Central and Eastern Europe. In the majority of countries the incidence of KRT remained stable between 2010 and 2021, whereas in about one third of countries the incidence of KRT significantly increased. On the other hand, in most countries the number of prevalent KRT patients significantly increased over the study period, especially prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. This increase was mainly driven by an increase in prevalent kidney transplant recipients. Patients on KRT tended to become older in the entire region, reflecting both the aging population, as well as the increasing willingness and capacity to treat elderly patients. Nevertheless, large country variations in the epidemiology of KRT remain and this study is a first important step to define country-specific priorities for the optimization of kidney care and to create further public awareness for kidney diseases in the Central and Eastern European region.

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