Am
J Kidney Dis 1996 Jul;28(1):72-81
Survival of patients undergoing renal replacement therapy in one center
with special emphasis on racial differences.
Bleyer AJ, Tell GS, Evans GW, Ettinger WH Jr, Burkart JM.
Department of Internal Medicine, Bowman Gray School of Medicine of Wake
Forest University, Winston-Salem, NC 27157, USA.
This study compared racial differences in end-stage renal disease (ESRD)
in 550 patients starting renal replacement therapy at a large academic
dialysis center between January 1, 1990, and December 31, 1993, with follow-up
through December 31, 1994. Patient groups were compared with respect to
cause of ESRD, comorbid factors at the start of dialysis therapy, choice
of modality, transplantation rate, and survival. Fifty-eight percent of
the patients were white and 42% were African-American. There was a similar
distribution of causes of ESRD between races. African-American patients
were less likely to choose peritoneal dialysis as initial therapy (11.6%
v 29.3%; P < 0.001) and were less likely to change dialysis modality.
Transplantation rates were significantly different between African-American
and white patients (9.3% v 27.6%; P < 0.001). African-Americans less
frequently received living-related, living-nonrelated, and cadaveric renal
transplants. Given differences in transplantation rates and in survival
of transplanted patients versus patients on dialysis, survival analysis
was performed without censoring for transplantation. A multivariate Cox
proportional hazards model was formed, and the following were identified
as being significant independent predictors of survival: age, race, age-race
interaction, serum albumin at the start of dialysis, activity level at
the start of dialysis, and presence of congestive heart failure and cancer.
Age had little effect on survival among African-American patients, while
it was a significant predictor of survival in white patients. In the group
of patients starting dialysis before the age of 30 years, African-American
patients had a significantly increased mortality risk compared with white
patients. However, white patients older than 50 years had a higher mortality
risk; this risk difference increased with age. Racial differences in mortality
among older white patients could not be explained by differences in comorbid
conditions, transplantation rates, or withdrawal from dialysis.
PMID: 8712225 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]