TY - JOUR
T1 - Causes of end-stage renal failure in black patients starting renal replacement therapy
AU - Fernandes, P F
AU - Ellis, P A
AU - Roderick, P J
AU - Cairns, H S
AU - Hicks, J A
AU - Cameron, J S
PY - 2000/8
Y1 - 2000/8
N2 - In the United States, blacks are more frequently diagnosed than whites with end-stage renal failure (ESRF) from primary hypertension or diabetic nephropathy, We performed a validation retrospective case-note study of all blacks with ESRF who started renal replacement therapy (RRT) at three teaching hospitals in London, England, during 1991 to 1995 to investigate and validate the causes of primary renal disease using standard criteria. We identified 144 black patients with a mean age of 52.0 +/- 16.0 (SD) years; 59% were men and 32% had renal histological data. One hundred forty-four whites who were matched for age, sex, and onset of RRT (42% with renal histological data) underwent a similar validation exercise. Before the validation, the principal working diagnosis in the black patients had been diabetic nephropathy in 35% (89%, type 2; 11%, type 1); primary hypertension, 19%; glomerulonephritis (GN), 18%; and uncertain cause, 15%. After validation analysis, this changed to diabetes, 38% (16% biopsy proven); uncertain, 24%; GN, 20%; and primary hypertension, only 10% (28% biopsy proven). Among the uncertain cases (n = 34), 19 patients had hypertension, but this could not be established as the primary disease; 94% of all blacks had hypertension, accelerated in 21%, Among whites, only 3.5% had primary hypertension, and this proportion was not changed by the validation study. Type 2 diabetes is the most common single cause of ESRF in black patients in London, and although hypertension is more common and more severe in blacks, the proportion of renal failure attributed to primary hypertension is overestimated, and the diagnosis is often made using inadequate criteria. (C) 2000 by the National Kidney Foundation, Inc.
AB - In the United States, blacks are more frequently diagnosed than whites with end-stage renal failure (ESRF) from primary hypertension or diabetic nephropathy, We performed a validation retrospective case-note study of all blacks with ESRF who started renal replacement therapy (RRT) at three teaching hospitals in London, England, during 1991 to 1995 to investigate and validate the causes of primary renal disease using standard criteria. We identified 144 black patients with a mean age of 52.0 +/- 16.0 (SD) years; 59% were men and 32% had renal histological data. One hundred forty-four whites who were matched for age, sex, and onset of RRT (42% with renal histological data) underwent a similar validation exercise. Before the validation, the principal working diagnosis in the black patients had been diabetic nephropathy in 35% (89%, type 2; 11%, type 1); primary hypertension, 19%; glomerulonephritis (GN), 18%; and uncertain cause, 15%. After validation analysis, this changed to diabetes, 38% (16% biopsy proven); uncertain, 24%; GN, 20%; and primary hypertension, only 10% (28% biopsy proven). Among the uncertain cases (n = 34), 19 patients had hypertension, but this could not be established as the primary disease; 94% of all blacks had hypertension, accelerated in 21%, Among whites, only 3.5% had primary hypertension, and this proportion was not changed by the validation study. Type 2 diabetes is the most common single cause of ESRF in black patients in London, and although hypertension is more common and more severe in blacks, the proportion of renal failure attributed to primary hypertension is overestimated, and the diagnosis is often made using inadequate criteria. (C) 2000 by the National Kidney Foundation, Inc.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0034255635&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1053/ajkd.2000.8974
DO - 10.1053/ajkd.2000.8974
M3 - Article
VL - 36
SP - 301
EP - 309
JO - American Journal of Kidney Diseases
JF - American Journal of Kidney Diseases
IS - 2
ER -