| Literature DB >> 27048280 |
Rachel Reilly1,2,3, Katharine Evans4, Judith Gomersall5,6,7, Gillian Gorham4, Micah D J Peters6, Steven Warren8, Rebekah O'Shea5, Alan Cass4, Alex Brown5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Indigenous peoples in Australia, New Zealand and Canada carry a greater burden of chronic kidney disease (CKD) than the general populations in each country, and this burden is predicted to increase. Given the human and economic cost of dialysis, understanding how to better manage CKD at earlier stages of disease progression is an important priority for practitioners and policy-makers. A systematic review of mixed evidence was undertaken to examine the evidence relating to the effectivness, cost-effectiveness and acceptability of chronic kidney disease management programs designed for Indigenous people, as well as barriers and enablers of implementation of such programs.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic kidney disease; Indigenous health; chronic disease management; systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27048280 PMCID: PMC4822249 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-016-1363-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1Focus of this review in relation to the prevention and management pathway for CKD
Four-step search strategy
| Step | Search strategy |
|---|---|
| 1 | Limited search of PubMed and CINAHL, analysis of text words in titles and abstracts and of index terms used to describe the articles |
| 2 | Search using all identified keywords and index terms across all included databases: PubMed, EBSCO CINAHL, Embase, ATSIHealth via Informit online, Web of Science, Psychinfo, Social Science Citation Index, APAIS Health databases, Australian Indigenous Health InfoNet and Primary Health Care Research and Information Service (PHCRIS), Mednar, Trove, Google Grey, OCLC WorldCat Dissertations and Theses, Canada Theses Portal and other sources: websites of relevant organizations in each country including Kidney Health Australia, Kidney Health New Zealand and The Kidney Foundation of Canada, Australian Institute of Torres Strait Islander Studies, NativeWeb and World Health Organizationa |
| 3 | Search of reference lists of all identified reports and articles for additional studies |
| 4 | Search of all relevant published systematic reviews and consultation with experts |
aSearches for each database available from the authors
Pubmed search terms
| Search | Query |
|---|---|
| #1 Population of Interest |
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| #2 Disease |
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| #3 Intervention or Setting |
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| #4 | #1 AND #2 AND #3 |
| Limits: | Publication date from 01/01/2000–2014; English language. |
Fig. 2PRISMA Diagram: Search and Study Selection
Critical appraisal of studies meeting the inclusion criteria
| RCT | Hotu et al. (2010) [ | Comparable Cohort | Kondalsamy-Chennakesavan (2003) [ | Descriptive/Case Series | Tan et al. (2014) [ | Walker et al. (2014) [ | Walker et al. (2013) [ | Amega (2012) [ | Shephard et al. (2006) [ | Qualitative | Walker et al. (2012) [ | Tchan et al. (2012) [ | Economic | Gador-Whyte et al. (2014) [ | Baker et al. (2005) [ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Q1. | Was the assignment to treatment groups truly random? | Y | Is the sample representative of patients in the population as a whole? | Y | Was the study based on a random or pseudo-random sample? | N | N | N | N | N | There is congruity between the stated philosophical perspective and the research methodology? | Y | U | Is there a well-defined question? | Y | Y |
| Q2. | Were participants blinded to treatment? | N | Are the patients at a similar point in the course of their condition? | N | Were the criteria for inclusion in the sample clearly defined? | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | There is congruity between the research methodology and the research question or objectives? | Y | Y | Is there a comprehensive description of alternatives? | NA | NA |
| Q3. | Was allocation to treatment groups concealed from the allocator? | Y | Has bias been minimized in relation to selection of cases and controls? | U | Were confounding factors identified and strategies to deal with them stated? | N | Y | Y | N | N | There is congruity between the research methodology and the methods used to collect data? | Y | Y | Are all important and relevant costs and outcomes for each alternative identified? | Y | U |
| Q4. | Were the outcomes of people who withdrew described and included in the analysis | Y | Are confounding factors identified and strategies to deal with them stated? | Y | Were outcomes assessed using objective criteria? | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | There is congruity between the research methodology and the representation and analysis of data? | Y | Y | Has clinical effectiveness been established? | NA | Y |
| Q5 | Were those assessing outcomes blind to the treatment allocation? | N | Are outcomes assessed using objective criteria? | Y | If comparisons are being made, were there sufficient descriptions of the groups? | NA | NA | NA | N | NA | There is congruence between the research methodology and the interpretation of results? | Y | Y | Are costs and outcomes measured accurately? | Y | Y |
| Q6. | Were the control and treatment groups comparable at entry? | Y | Was follow-up carried out over a sufficient time period? | Y | Was follow-up carried out over a sufficient time period? | N | N | N | U | N | There is a statement locating the researcher culturally or theoretically | N | N | Are costs and outcomes valued credibly? | Y | U |
| Q7. | Were groups treated identically other than for the named interventions? | Y | Were the outcomes of people who withdrew described and included in the analysis? | Y | Were the outcomes of people who withdrew included in the analysis? | N | Y | Y | N | Y | The influence of the researcher on the research, and vice-versa, is addressed | N | N | Are costs and outcomes adjusted for differential timing? | U | Y |
| Q8. | Were outcomes measured in the same way for all groups? | Y | Were outcomes measured in a reliable way? | U | Were outcomes measured in a reliable way? | Y | Y | Y | U | N | Participants and their voices are adequately represented | Y | Y | Is there an incremental analysis of costs and consequences? | N | Y |
| Q9. | Were outcomes measured in a reliable way? | Y | Was appropriate statistical analysis used? | Y | Was appropriate statistical analysis used? | Y | Y | Y | NA | Y | The research is ethical according to current criteria or evidence of ethical approval by an appropriate body | Y | Y | Are sensitivity analyses conducted to investigate uncertainty in estimates of cost or consequences? | N | Y |
| Q10. | Was appropriate statistical analysis used? | Y | Conclusions drawn in the research report appear to flow from the analysis or interpretation of the data | Y | Y | Do study results include all issues of concern to users? | Y | U | ||||||||
| Q11. | Are the results generalizable to the setting of interest in the review? | U | U | |||||||||||||
| Quality Ratinga | 8/10 Good | 6/9 Moderate | 4/8 Moderate | 6/8 Moderate | 6/8 Moderate | 2/8 Poor | 4/8 Moderate | 8/10 Good | 7/10 Moderate | 5/9 Moderate | 6/10 Moderate |
Y yes, N no, U unclear. aGood: at least 80 %; Moderate: 50-80 %; Poor: less than 50 %
Characteristics of studies addressing question 1
| Study | Objective | Study design | Setting | Intervention and comparator | Comparator | Participants | Outcomes measured |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tan et al. (2014) [ | To determine the effectiveness of a PHC-based, nurse-led CKD program with Tongan staff can improve medication adherence and clinical outcomes | 2-year prospective uncontrolled cohort study, conducted 2011 – 2013 | NZ urban area, PHC service in Auckland with Tongan-speaking staff | Nurse-led with input from GP and diabetologist when necessary. Focus on prescribing antihypertensives and improving adherence. BP measured 2–6 weekly. Some outreach and lifestyle, dietary and self-care education. | No comparator. | 43 Pasifika patients with type 2 diabetes, CKD (mostly stages 2 and 3) and hypertension. Mean age 53 years, 77 % male. 39 available for follow-up at ≥17 mths. | BP, no. antihypertensives, eGFR, ACR, HbA1c |
| Walker et al. (2013, 2014) [ | To test feasibility and effectiveness of a specialist renal nurse-led self-management intervention to slow progression of CKD. | 1 year prospective uncontrolled cohort study, conducted 2011–2012. | NZ, rural area; two PHC practices in Hawke’s Bay. | Specialist nurse-led partnership with primary care clinicians. Focus on coaching to improve self-management. Individual educational and clinical care plans developed followed by 12 weeks of fortnightly self-management sessions, with monitoring to 12 months. Some outreach and free care, medications and transport. | No comparator. | 52 patients (37 NZ Māori, 10 Cook Island Māori/Samoan and 5 NZ European) with type 2 diabetes, CKD | BP, no. antihypertensives, eGFR, ACR, HbA1c, self-management. |
| Hotu et al. (2010) [ | To determine whether a nurse-led community-based CKD program involving a Māori or Pasifika health care assistant (HCA) (‘community care’; CC) is more clinically effective than ‘usual care’ (UC). | 1 year RCT, conducted 2004–2006. | NZ, urban area; hospital clinics and PHC services in Auckland. | Nurse-led with focus on prescribing antihypertensives and improving adherence. Monthly outreach by HCA to monitor BP, promote adherence and provide free transport. Lifestyle, dietary and self-care education. Received routine care as necessary. | Lifestyle, dietary and self-care education. Usual care by GP and renal clinic. | 65 Māori and Pasifika patients with type 2 diabetes, CKD (mostly stage 3) and hypertension (CC: | BP, no. antihypertensives, adherence, eGFR, ACR, HbA1c. |
| Shephard et al. (2006) [ | To determine the clinical effectiveness (and acceptability- see below) of the Umoona Kidney Project, a PHC-based partnership between the local Aboriginal community controlled health service (ACCHS) and visiting specialists from Adelaide. | 2 year prospective uncontrolled cohort study, conducted 1998–2000. | Australia, remote area; ACCHS in Coober Pedy. | Specialist-run with focus on prescribing antihypertensives, delivering ACR point of care tests (POCT) and ascertaining acceptability of project. Regular visits by nephrologists and 6-monthly monitoring of clinical parameters. Lifestyle and dietary education provided. Some outreach. | No comparator. | 35 Aboriginal patients with hypertension and with or at risk of CKD (20 had albuminuria). Mean age 49 years, 54 % male. Patients followed for a mean of 15 months with none lost to follow-up. | BP, no. antihypertensives, adherence, eGFR, ACR, program acceptability. |
| Kondalsamy-Chennakesavan (2003) [ | 1) To determine whether improvements in BP and metabolic control were sustained following the handover of the visiting specialist-run MRTP to the local THB. | 2.5 and 5.5 year retrospective uncontrolled cohort study, comparing cohorts: | Australia, remote area; ACCHS on the Tiwi Islands, 80 km north of Darwin. | The MRTP was a specialist-run project that ran alongside the local health care facilities. The focus was prescribing antihypertensives. Lifestyle and dietary education delivered and individual treatment plans developed. Systematic recalls and active follow-up to monitor BP. | CCT patients assigned a chronic disease care plan and were managed in routine PHC setting. No specific resources for renal patients, opportunistic follow-up, less systematic medical oversight. | 238 Aboriginal patients with hypertension and/or CKD (mostly stages 1 and 2). Mean age: MRTP: 44; CCT: 42 years; % male: MRTP: 45 %; CCT: 44 %. | BP, HbA1c. |
Findings relating to question 1
| Tan et al. (2014) [ | Walker et al. (2013, 2014) [ | Hotu et al. (2010) [ | Shephard et al. (2006) [ | Kondalsamy-Chennakesavan (2003) [ | Kondalsamy-Chennakesavan (2003) [ | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Outcome measure | Baseline | 17mths | Baseline | 12mths | Baseline | 12mths | Baseline | 15mths | Baseline | 30mths | Pre-( | Post-( |
| Systolic Blood Pressure | 137 (17) | 126 (16)* | 153 (15) | 131 (11)* | 161 (20) | 140 (19) | 151 (18) | 137 (18)* | 132 (22) | 123 (16) | 124 (14) | 129 (15) |
| Median ACR | 126 (65–194) | 51 (20–97) | 34.9 (14.2–150.9) | Median not reported | 3.3 (1.5–3.2) | 2 (0.5–3.8) | 5.7 (1.2–15.2) | 4.3 (1.3–16.7) | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| eGFR | 68 (50–81) | 63.1 (42–73)* | 63.1 (20.2) | 60.8 (18.2) | 39 (14) | 41 (18) | 110 | 118* | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| HbA1c %(SD) | 9.6 (24) | 8.6 (20)* | 9.1 (14)b | 8.0 (9)b* | 8.3 (9)a
| 8.0 (10)a
| NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
*p < 0.05 from baseline to follow-up
**p < 0.05 program vs. comparator at follow-up in Hotu et al. (2010) [22]
#Hotu et al. (2013) measured 24h urinary protein
aSE converted to SD (SD = N√SE)
bMmol/mol converted to %
cMeans provided by author. Change per unit per month −0.34 (−0.55, −0.12), p < 0.05
Characteristics of studies addressing question 2
| Study | Objective | Study design | Setting | Intervention and comparator | Comparator | Participants | Outcomes measured |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gador-Whyte et al. (2014) [ | To estimate, from a remote ACCHS perspective, the cost of completing best practice chronic care tasks for patients with type 2 diabetes and/or CKD. | Partial economic evaluation/costing study. | Australia, remote area; ACCHS in unnamed Central Australian Aboriginal community. | Best practice care for patients with diabetes and/or CKD. | Usual care delivery for patients with diabetes and/or CKD in that particular ACCHS setting |
| Costs: annual costs (total and per patient) of managing CKD and diabetes in 2009–2010 and projected annual costs using optimal PHC management; difference in these actual and projected costs. |
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| Conducted 2010–2011. | |||||||
| Baker et al. (2005) [ | To assess, from a government health service perspective, if the MRTP reduced the costs of treating ESKD through improved clinical outcomes. | Economic evaluation. | Australia, remote area; ACCHS on Tiwi Islands, 80 km north of Darwin. | Program to modify kidney and cardiovascular disease. Antihypertensives and health education offered. | Usual Care |
| Health outcomes: Dialysis starts and dialysis person-years avoided. |
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| Costs: MRTP delivery costs; ESKD treatment costs; total cost. | ||||||
| Conducted 1995–2000. | Net cost of the program/savings compared to usual care. | ||||||
| Measured at 3 and 4.7 years. |
Comparison of the effects and costs of the MRTP and control at 4.7 years (Baker et al.) [26]
| MRTP | Control | Difference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of client years | 897.8 | 897.8 | |
| Program delivery cost (incremental) | $987,926 | $0 | $987,926 |
|
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| ESKD treatment years incurred | 27.7 | 64.5 | −36.8 |
| ESKD treatment costs incurred | $3,120,350 | $7,265,796 | –$4,145,446 |
| Total cost (program and ESKD costs) | $4,108,276 | $7,265,796 | –$3,157,521 |
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| Relative risk for treatment versus control | 0.43 (0.19–0.96), | ||
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| 57 %, | ||
| Number of dialysis starts | 11 | 26 | −15 |
| Lifetime ESKF treatment costs incurred | $3,853,332 | $9,107,875 | –$5,254,543 |
| Total cost (program and lifetime ESKD costs) | $4,841,258 | $9,107,875 | –$4,266,618 |
Costs of usual and best practice care for patients in an ACCHS setting (Gador-Whyte et al.) [27]
| Estimated 2009–10 costs ($) | Projected best practice costs ($) | Difference ($) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Costs for diabetes and CKD care in a remote ACCHS |
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| 446,585 | 6123 | 645,313 | 7856 | −198,728 | −1733 | |
Characteristics of studies addressing question 3
| Study | Study design | Setting | Participants | Study objectives |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tchan et al. (2012) [ | Mixed methods study. Qualitative component used a descriptive, exploratory approach. Semi-structured interviews and inductive analysis. Conducted 2009–2012. | Australia, remote area; ACCHS in Broken Hill and surrounding towns. | 20 service providers comprising 4 medical specialists, 6 managers, 2 Aboriginal health workers (AHWs), 5 GPs, 3 local Aboriginal employees. | To understand provider views on the implementation of the Outback Vascular Health Service (OVHS), a chronic disease outreach program that operated regularly within the Maari Ma ACCHS |
| Walker et al. (2012) [ | Descriptive, exploratory approach. In-depth semi-structured interviews and thematic analysis guided by Thomas’ (2006) general inductive approach. | NZ, variety of areas; pre-dialysis clinics primarily on the North Island. | 11 pre-dialysis nurses working with large case-loads of clients approaching ESKD, including a significant proportion of Māori and Pasifika patients. | To understand perceptions of pre-dialysis specialist nurses on factors influencing their delivery of effective pre-dialysis care. |
| Shephard et al. (2006) [ | 7-item Cross-sectional survey measured on a 5-point scale and administered by either AHWs, the nurse in charge, community leaders or a medical student | Australia, remote area; ACCHS in Coober Pedy | 50 community members including 27 participants in the Umoona kidney program | To determine the acceptability of the Umoona Kidney Project |
Fig. 3Synthesis of qualitative findings addressing question 3