Abstract

Anaemia among patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) leads to poor overall outcomes. This study explores anaemia and its impact on nondialysis CKD (NDD-CKD) patients. 2,303 adults with CKD from two CKD.QLD Registry sites were characterised at consent and followed until start of kidney replacement therapy (KRT), death, or censor date. Mean follow-up was 3.9 (SD 2.1) years. Analysis explored the impact of anaemia on death, KRT start, cardiovascular events (CVE), admissions, and costs in these NDD-CKD patients. At consent, 45.6% patients were anaemic. Males were more often anaemic (53.6%) than females, and anaemia was significantly more common over the age of 65 years. The prevalence of anaemia was highest among CKD patients with diabetic nephropathy (27.4%) and renovascular disease (29.2%) and lowest in patients with genetic renal disease (3.3%). Patients with admissions for gastrointestinal bleeding had more severe anaemia, but accounted for only the minority of cases overall. Administration of ESAs, iron infusions, and blood transfusions were all correlated with more severe degrees of anaemia. The number of hospital admissions, length of stay, and hospital costs were all strikingly higher with more severe degrees of anaemia. Adjusted hazard ratios (CI 95%) of patients with moderate and severe anaemia vs. no anaemia for subsequent CVE, KRT, and death without KRT were 1.7 (1.4-2.0), 2.0 (1.4-2.9), and 1.8 (1.5-2.3), respectively. Anaemia is associated with higher rates of CVE, progression to KRT and death in NDD- CKD patients, and with greater hospital utilisation and costs. Preventing and treating anaemia should improve clinical and economic outcomes.

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