Providence study reveals high incidence of chronic kidney disease in diabetes beset by disparities

RENTON, Wash. [Oct. 13, 2022] – A Providence article published in the New England Journal of Medicine highlights a study revealing a concerningly high incidence, or rate of new onset, of chronic kidney disease (CKD) in people with diabetes that was most evident in racial and ethnic minority groups.

The prevalence of kidney failure requiring dialysis or transplant more than doubled to nearly 800,000 persons in the United States between 2000 and 2019 with diabetes as the leading cause. The rate of new onset of CKD in people with diabetes was previously unknown, yet the value of such incidence data is vital for identifying high-risk populations, determining the effectiveness of interventions, and assessing the effects on health care delivery and public health responses. Even more striking, less than 10% of patients with early stage-stage kidney disease are aware of having CKD at a point when therapies to reduce progression are most effective.

Researchers from Providence, the University of California Los Angeles, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention , and University of Washington School of Medicine tracked 654,549 adults with diabetes from 2015 through 2020 using electronic health records from Providence and the University of California Los Angeles Health, large not-for-profit health systems serving the Western United States. It found new onset CKD rates were higher by approximately 60%, 40%, 33%, and 25% in the Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander, Black, American Indian/Alaska Native, and Hispanic/Latino(a) groups, respectively, compared to White persons with diabetes. Although high CKD incidence in diabetes persists, the rate declined from 8% to 6.4% per year in the overall diabetes population between 2015–2016 and 2019–2020.

“Given the rapidly growing population with diabetes in United States and the corresponding high rates of kidney failure, the persistently high incidence of CKD marked by racial and ethnic disparities is troubling,” said Katherine R. Tuttle, M.D., lead author of the study, Executive Director for Research, Providence Inland Northwest Health and Professor of Medicine, University of Washington. “Inclusive strategies for prevention, detection, and intervention are needed to reduce CKD risk in people with diabetes.”

About Providence

Providence is a not-for-profit Catholic health system and one of the nation’s largest health systems, comprising a diverse family of organizations and driven by a belief that health is a human right. With 52 hospitals, over 900 physician clinics, senior services, supportive housing, and many other health and educational services, the health system and its partners employ more than 120,000 caregivers serving communities across seven states – Alaska, California, Montana, New Mexico, Oregon, Texas, and Washington, with system offices in Renton, Wash., and Irvine, Calif. Learn about our vision of health for a better world at Providence.org.

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