Litcius/Paper detail

Projecting the economic burden of chronic kidney disease at the patient level (Inside CKD): a microsimulation modelling study

Steven J. Chadban, Mustafa Arıcı, Albert Power, Kwan‐Dun Wu, Francesco Saverio Mennini, José Javier Arango Álvarez, Juan José García Sánchez, Salvatore Barone, Joshua Card-Gowers, Alexander M. Martin, Lise Retat

2024EClinicalMedicine68 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background The growing burden of chronic kidney disease (CKD) places substantial financial pressures on patients, healthcare systems, and society. An understanding of the costs attributed to CKD and kidney replacement therapy (KRT) is essential for evidence-based policy making. Inside CKD maps and projects the economic burden of CKD across 31 countries/regions from 2022 to 2027. Methods A microsimulation model was developed that generated virtual populations using national demographics, relevant literature, and renal registries for the 31 countries/regions included. Patient-level country/region-specific cost data were extracted via a pragmatic local literature review and under advisement from local experts. Direct cost projections were generated for diagnosed CKD (by age, stage 3a–5), KRT (by modality), cardiovascular complications (heart failure, myocardial infarction, stroke), and comorbidities (hypertension, type 2 diabetes). Findings For the 31 countries/regions, Inside CKD projected that annual direct costs (US$) of diagnosed CKD and KRT would increase by 9.3% between 2022 and 2027, from $372.0 billion to $406.7 billion. Annual KRT-associated costs were projected to increase by 10.0% from $169.6 billion to $186.6 billion between 2022 and 2027. By 2027, patients receiving KRT are projected to constitute 5.3% of the diagnosed CKD population but contribute 45.9% of the total costs. Interpretation The economic burden of CKD is projected to increase from 2022 to 2027. KRT contributes disproportionately to this burden. Earlier diagnosis and proactive management could slow disease progression, potentially alleviating the substantial costs associated with later CKD stages. Data presented here can be used to inform healthcare resource allocation and shape future policy. Funding AstraZeneca.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineMicrosimulationKidney diseaseIntensive care medicineDisease burdenBurden of diseaseDiseaseInternal medicineEngineeringTransport engineeringChronic Kidney Disease and DiabetesDialysis and Renal Disease ManagementBlood Pressure and Hypertension Studies
Projecting the economic burden of chronic kidney disease at the patient level (Inside CKD): a microsimulation modelling study | Litcius