Diabetes and renal disease: who does what?
Editor – Jones et al. (Clin Med October 2013 pp 460–4) provide a revealing analysis of the distribution of patients with diabetes and kidney disease across the health service. They show that applying traditional referral guidelines which use arbitrary estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) criteria leads to patients who should be managed in primary care remaining under nephrologists and vice versa, with concerning evidence of ageism. They highlight that the rate of progression of eGFR should be intrinsic to the decision to refer the patient, but worry that this will overload the nephrology service.
We have operated an integrated diabetes kidney service for nearly 10 years based upon identifying those patients whose eGFR is declining.1 It uses a database of diabetes patients to produce a weekly report listing those whose eGFR has been measured in the previous week. An eGFR graph is drawn for each patient and those with a declining trend are reviewed in the diabetes renal clinic by a nephrologist. Once assessed, diagnosed, educated and treated, patients with a stable eGFR are returned to primary or general diabetes care. Those likely to need dialysis or a transplant within the next 12 months are transferred to a multidisciplinary renal clinic.
As patients’ eGFR results, wherever they originate, are monitored via the weekly report, they are never completely ‘discharged’ from specialist care. By having a safe exit route from the clinic, the number of patients attending the clinic in person is greatly reduced. Currently, an average of 85 patients per week are reviewed virtually by their eGFR graph. The clinic capacity that has been freed up is used to see more referrals at an earlier stage of CKD. The new to follow up ratio is now 1:1. Seeing patients at an earlier stage in disease progression helps prevent loss of renal function. The number of patients starting dialysis since the system was introduced has declined.1
This system has now been incorporated into the clinical chemistry service to include all patients in the community.2 This avoids the need for a separate diabetes database and should be possible in all NHS pathology laboratories.
Footnotes
Please submit letters for the editor's consideration within three weeks of receipt of Clinical Medicine. Letters should ideally be limited to 350 words, and sent by email to: clinicalmedicine{at}rcplondon.ac.uk
- © 2014 Royal College of Physicians
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