Saudi Journal of Kidney Diseases and Transplantation (Jan 2021)

Current Status and Future of End-Stage Kidney Disease in Gulf Cooperation Council Countries: Challenges and Opportunities

  • Tushar Vachharajani,
  • Sanjiv Jasuja,
  • Ali AlSahow,
  • Saeed M G. Alghamdi,
  • Ali H Al-Aradi,
  • Issa Al Salmi,
  • Bassam Bernieh,
  • Yousif Bahbahani,
  • Fadwa Alali,
  • Raja Ramachandran,
  • Suceena Alexander,
  • Sandeep K Mandal,
  • Rajeev K Malhotra,
  • Manisha Sahay,
  • Vinant Bhargava,
  • Vivekanand Jha,
  • Devendra Singh Rana,
  • Gaurav Sagar,
  • Anupam Bahl,
  • Vijay Kher,
  • Narayan Prasad,
  • Krishnaswamy S Kumar,
  • Mona Alrukhaimi,
  • Gloria E Ashuntantang,
  • Shalini Verma,
  • Maurizio Gallieni

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/1319-2442.338281
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 32, no. 4
pp. 1073 – 1088

Abstract

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There is a paucity of data on epidemiology along with an incomplete registry of end-stage kidney disease (ESKD), nephrologist workforce, and variability among the countries of Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). The study is an observation, descriptive study which aimed to describe current ESKD burden, nephrologist density, and kidney care infrastructure in GCC. Responses to a questionnaire-based survey obtained from representatives of the Nephrology Societies of GCC countries were analyzed. The categorical variables were compared using Chi-square test. A P = 5% was considered as significant. The mean prevalence of ESKD per million populations (pmp) was 551, highest in Oman (1000/pmp), least in Qatar (347/pmp). Predominant etiology in GCC was diabetes mellitus (DM) and hypertension (HTN) (100%, each), followed by chronic glomerulonephritis (66.7%). A transplant registry was maintained by all GCC countries. Hemodialysis (HD) (67.2%) was the most opted modality of kidney replacement therapy (KRT), followed by kidney transplantation (22%) and peritoneal dialysis (9.6%); 1.0% of patients opted for conservative management. Unplanned initiation of HD was three times more common. The access distribution among incident and prevalent HD patients respectively was (i) nontunneled central catheter (nTCC) (58.7 ± 36.6 vs. 1.5 ± 1.5), (ii) tunneled central catheter (23.5 ± 29.9 vs. 33.6 ± 10.0), and (iii) arteriovenous fistula (17.3± 14.4 vs. 57.8 ± 11.86). Death and transplantation were the reasons for dropout from HD. GCC has adequate kidney care infrastructure. There are 1686 nephrologists [range: Bahrain 9, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) 1279]. Qatar, KSA, and Kuwait provide training in kidney biopsy; all countries except Bahrain have formal training programs for nTCC placement. ESKD prevalence is high, DM, HTN; glome-rulonephritis (GN) is the most common causes. The need for KRT is expected to rise in GCC. HD is the predominant KRT modality with a high prevalence of dialysis catheters as vascular access.