JAMA
1993 Feb 3;269(5):603-8
The impact of comorbid and sociodemographic factors on access to renal transplantation.
Gaylin DS, Held PJ, Port FK, Hunsicker LG, Wolfe RA, Kahan BD, Jones CA,
Agodoa LY.
Urban Institute, Washington, DC 20037.
OBJECTIVE: To assess the impact of sociodemographic
factors and comorbid conditions on access to renal transplantation for
adult US dialysis patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD).
DESIGN: Cohort analytic study. Data on comorbid conditions
at onset of ESRD were abstracted from patients' medical records and matched
to sociodemographic and ESRD data from the United States Renal Data System
database.
SETTING: United States Medicare dialysis population.
PATIENTS: Random, national sample of ESRD patients starting
dialysis in 1986 and 1987 (n = 4118).
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Time to first renal transplant
(living or cadaver donor) since onset of ESRD regressed with two nested
Cox proportional hazards models, first against sociodemographic factors
alone, and then against sociodemographic factors and comorbid conditions.
RESULTS: Cardiovascular diseases are most predictive
of who received a transplant; patients with coronary heart disease, congestive
heart failure, or left ventricular hypertrophy showed lower transplantation
rates relative to patients without the disease (relative rate [RR] = 0.65
to 0.80, P < .05 each). Obese patients and patients with peripheral
vascular disease also showed lower transplantation rates (RR = 0.65 to
0.75, P < .05 each). Previously reported sociodemographic effects of
lower transplantation rates for older patients, women, nonwhite patients,
and lower income patients were confirmed (P < .01). Sociodemographic
effects remained essentially unchanged when adjusted for comorbid conditions.
CONCLUSIONS: These findings indicate that sociodemographics
have strong independent effects on access to transplantation that cannot
be explained away as "surrogate" effects related to comorbid
factors. Furthermore, the results suggest that lower mortality rates for
transplant recipients relative to dialysis patients are due, in part,
to a healthier case mix among patients receiving transplants.
PMID: 8421364 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]