Adolescents and young adults with chronic disease face many personal and systemic barriers that may impede their successful transition from pediatric to adult care, putting them at risk for treatment nonadherence, loss to follow-up, and poor health outcomes. Such barriers include impaired socioemotional functioning, overreliance on adult caregivers, lack of disease-specific knowledge, and poor coordination between pediatric and adult health care services. In 2007, we established a specialized youth to adult nephrology transition clinic at a tertiary care center to address these barriers and provide adolescents and young adults with renal disease followed at the affiliated children's hospital with a seamless transition to adult care. The attending clinic nephrologist collected data prospectively for this quality improvement report. The features of this specialized clinic included (1) single point of entry and single triage adult nephrologist, (2) ongoing follow-up with a single adult nephrologist who communicated with the pediatric nephrologists, and (3) a single specialized clinic nurse who provided disease-specific education and helped to ensure ongoing patient engagement and follow-up. Importantly, the transition patients were booked into regular appointment slots in the adult nephrologist's general clinic, which facilitated regular follow-up without additional resources. The salary of the transition clinic nurse was covered by an unrestricted grant. Patient visits were in-person, except between 2020 and 2021 when visits were by telephone due to the pandemic. A total of 213 patients were referred and assessed in the transition clinic from February 2007 until October 2022. Most referrals were from pediatric nephrologists. Among the patients, 29% had a hereditary kidney disease; in 71%, the disease was acquired. The most common disease was glomerulonephritis and ~30% of the patients suffered from a "rare" disease. Of the 213 patients, 123 (58%) continue to be followed up (mean follow-up: 4.8 years), 27 (13%) were transferred to other physicians, in part to accommodate treatment closer to patients' homes, and 29 (14%) without ongoing care needs were discharged. Only 33 (15%) were lost to follow-up. There were several advantages to the clinic, including the maintenance of accurate records, a process to minimize loss to follow-up, and a "critical mass" of patients with rare diseases, which facilitated development of special expertise in rare disease pathogenesis, diagnosis, treatment, and management of complications. Patients with glomerulonephritis demonstrated a stable serum creatinine over 3 to 15 years, and morbidity (as reflected by emergency room visits and hospitalizations) was low. Due to the relatively small numbers of patients in the disease categories, it was not possible to determine conclusively whether attendance of patients in the transition clinic reduced the rate of progression of kidney disease or morbidity. A dedicated referral, triage, and follow-up process post-transition with only modest financial resources and personnel can result in accurate tracking of clinic data, as well as consistent and reliable follow-up and expert patient care.
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