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Published in: Clinical and Experimental Nephrology 3/2009

01-06-2009 | Guidelines

Chapter 4. Primary kidney disease leading to dialysis therapy

Published in: Clinical and Experimental Nephrology | Issue 3/2009

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  • In Japan, the most frequent primary disease for dialysis is diabetic nephropathy, followed by chronic glomerulonephritis and nephrosclerosis as the third.
  • Since the prevalence of metabolic syndrome, a risk factor for dialysis therapy, continues to increase, an urgent initiative against this syndrome is needed.
  • The incidence of dialysis patients in Japan in 2007 was about 35,000 and is growing steadily. As of the end of 2007, the prevalence of dialysis patients was over 2,100 per million population, i.e., 1 per 464 persons is now on chronic dialysis (Fig. 4-1). Primary kidney diseases are diabetic nephropathy, chronic glomerulonephritis, and nephrosclerosis in descending order of incidence (Fig. 4-2). In 2007, dialysis was introduced because of diabetic nephropathy in 43.4% of the incident dialysis patients. Unidentified primary kidney disease is increasing steadily. The proportion of polycystic kidney is 2.3% and rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis 1.3%, as shown in Table 4.
    Table 4-1
    Incident dialysis patients by kidney diseases
    Kidney disease
    Number of patients
    %
    Rank
    DM nephropathy
    14,968
    42.9
    1
    Chronic glomerulonephritis
    8,914
    25.6
    2
    Unknown
    3,454
    9.9
    3
    Nephrosclerosis
    3,262
    9.4
    4
    Others
    903
    2.6
    5
    Polycystic kidney disease
    827
    2.4
    6
    RPGN
    421
    1.2
    7
    Chronic pyelonephritis
    295
    0.8
    8
    Malignant hypertension
    269
    0.8
    9
    SLE
    268
    0.8
    10
    Graft failure
    224
    0.6
    11
    Amyloidosis
    168
    0.5
    12
    Tumors in the genito-urinary system
    158
    0.5
    13
    Unclassified GN
    149
    0.4
    14
    Myeloma
    137
    0.4
    15
    Obstructive uropathy
    128
    0.4
    16
    Gouty kidney
    113
    0.3
    17
    Genito-urinary stones
    75
    0.2
    18
    Kidney malformation
    51
    0.1
    19
    Pregnancy-related
    44
    0.1
    20
    Congenital
    30
    0.1
    21
    Genitourinary tuberculosis
    19
    0.1
    22
    Total
    34,877
    100.0
     
    The data are quoted, with modification, from The Current Status of Chronic Dialysis Therapy in Our Country (as of 31 December, 2007) edited by The Japanese Society for Dialysis Therapy
  • Diabetic nephropathy overtook chronic glomerulonephritis as the leading cause for the introduction of dialysis in 1998. Since with metabolic syndrome, the risk of CKD is increasing more and more, an urgent initiative to prevent metabolic syndrome is required for the prevention of CKD.
  • It is appreciated that the incidence of ESKD patients with chronic glomerulonephritis has been gradually decreasing in recent years (Fig. 4-2). There are various reasons for this decline. One reason is a decrease in infectious diseases that are related to the development of nephritis or improvement of sanitation and social conditions. This is the case especially for the decreasing incidence of acute glomerulonephritis and membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis. Another reason is that chronic glomerulonephritis has been treated better with drug therapy, including “cocktail” therapy combining corticosteroid, immunosuppressants, and anticoagulation agents. Moreover, tonsillectomy with steroid pulse therapy has recently been reported to improve IgA nephropathy, the disease comprising more than 50% of the cases of chronic glomerulonephritides in Japan (Fig. 4-3). In Fig. 4-3, clinical remission means the disappearance of both proteinuria and hematuria, and thus a remission case is expected to prevent progression to ESKD.
  • The incidence of dialysis introduction because of nephrosclerosis, which is caused primarily by hypertension (including malignant hypertension), is still increasing and reached 10.0% in 2007 (Table 4-1). This increment is suspected to increase more in the future. Conceivably, hypertension is a risk factor for kidney dysfunction leading to dialysis in most of the kidney diseases such as diabetic nephropathy and chronic glomerulonephritis. Moreover, there is an increase in atherosclerosis due to metabolic syndrome and elderly populations. Atherosclerosis causes cerebrovascular disease as well as cardiovascular disease and further contributes to the development of CKD. Atherosclerosis-related nephropathy is rapidly increasing with an unfavorable prognosis and manifests as a variety of phenotypes, such as renal artery stenosis, renovascular hypertension, ischemic nephropathy, and cholesterol embolism.
Metadata
Title
Chapter 4. Primary kidney disease leading to dialysis therapy
Publication date
01-06-2009
Publisher
Springer Japan
Published in
Clinical and Experimental Nephrology / Issue 3/2009
Print ISSN: 1342-1751
Electronic ISSN: 1437-7799
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10157-009-0134-1

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