Abstract

In April 2006, Japan's health insurance system instituted a bundling policy that included recombinant human erythropoietin (rHuEPO) in outpatient hemodialysis therapy. To evaluate outcomes of this, we analyzed a prospective cohort of hemodialysis patients in the Japan Dialysis Outcomes and Practice Patterns Study, in 53 facilities using prevalent cross-sections of 1584 patients before and 1622 patients after the rHuEPO reimbursement change. Patient data included hemoglobin levels, iron management profiles, and anemia treatment with rHuEPO and intravenous iron. No significant differences were found in pre- or post-policy cross-sections for hemoglobin distributions or the percentage of patients prescribed rHuEPO. Among patients receiving rHuEPO, the mean dose significantly decreased by 11.8 percent. The percentage of patients prescribed intravenous iron over 4 months significantly increased; however, the mean dose of iron did not significantly change. Thus, this bundling policy was associated with reduced rHuEPO doses, increased intravenous iron use, and stable hemoglobin levels in Japanese patients receiving hemodialysis.

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