학술논문

Projecting the Burden of Chronic Kidney Disease in a Developed Country and Its Implications on Public Health
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
International Journal of Nephrology. Annual 2018, Vol. 2018
Subject
Chronic kidney failure -- Diagnosis -- Analysis -- Health aspects
Markov processes -- Analysis -- Health aspects
Mortality -- Analysis
Public health -- Analysis -- Health aspects
Kidney diseases
Health
Analysis
Health aspects
Diagnosis
Language
English
ISSN
2090-2158
Abstract
Background. Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) is a major public health problem worldwide. There is limited literature on a model to project the number of people with CKD. This study projects the number of residents with CKD in Singapore by 2035 using a Markov model. Methods. A Markov model with nine mutually exclusive health states was developed according to the clinical course of CKD, based on a discrete time interval of 1 year. The model simulated the transition of cohorts across different health states from 2007 to 2035 using prevalence, incidence, mortality, disease transition, and disease detection rates. Results. From 2007 to 2035, the number of residents with CKD is projected to increase from 316,521 to 887,870 and the prevalence from 12.2% to 24.3%. Patients with CKD stages 1-2 constituted the largest proportion. The proportion of undiagnosed cases will decline from 72.1% to 56.4%, resulting from faster progression to higher CKD stages and its eventual detection. Conclusion. By 2035, about one- quarter of the Singapore residents are expected to have CKD. National policies need to focus on primary disease prevention and early disease detection to avoid delayed treatment of CKD which eventually leads to end-stage renal disease.
1. Introduction Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) is a major public health problem worldwide. The prevalence of CKD in Singapore was reported to be 15.6% [1] in 2007. This was considered [...]