Why Many Dialysis Patients Readmitted Soon after Discharge?

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Why Many Dialysis Patients Readmitted Soon after Discharge?

A new analysis found that nearly one-quarter of dialysis patients who are admitted to the hospital are readmitted soon after discharge, often for a diagnosis that is different than the one that led to the initial hospitalization.

Why Many Dialysis Patients Readmitted Soon after Discharge?More than half a million people in the United States receive treatment for kidney failure, mostly through hemodialysis. On average, hemodialysis patients are admitted to the hospital nearly twice a year, and they have double the 30-day readmission rate as patients without kidney dysfunction. In 2017, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services began penalizing outpatient dialysis units for excessive readmissions. Despite these efforts, there is a lack of information regarding characteristics and predictors of readmission.

To investigate, a team led by Girish Nadkarni, MD, MPH and Lili Chan, MD, MS (Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai) set out to determine the nationwide readmission rate in dialysis patients and to examine reasons for initial admissions and readmissions. When the researchers analyzed 2013 data from the Nationwide Readmission Database, they found 390,627 initial hospitalizations of hemodialysis patients, and 22% of these initial hospitalizations were followed by an unplanned readmission within 30 days. Readmission rates were similar across the top 10 initial admission diagnoses, and only 20% of readmissions were for the same diagnosis as the initial admission.

“Regardless of what patients initially were admitted for, they had similar readmission rates. This along with the low concordance suggests that we need to focus on the patient as a whole rather than their admission diagnoses,” said Dr. Chan.

The investigators also found that patient characteristics that were associated with a high likelihood of readmission included female gender, younger age, depression, liver disease, congestive heart failure, and drug abuse. Importantly, only a small proportion (2%) of all patients accounted for 20% of all readmissions.

“To reduce readmissions in dialysis patients, perhaps a good starting place would be to institute interventions targeted at high utilizers and create a validated risk score incorporating likely risk factors,” said Dr. Nadkarni.

In an accompanying editorial, Magdalene Assimon, PharmD, MS and Jennifer Flythe, MD, MPH (UNC School of Medicine) noted that there is surprisingly little published data evaluating interventions designed to reduce readmissions and stressed “the need for innovative, integrative data analytics in readmission risk modeling and a greater emphasis on testing and refining readmission prevention strategies.” They also quoted the American philosopher John Dewey, who said, “A problem well put, is half-solved.” “The problem of 30-day hospital readmissions among individuals receiving maintenance hemodialysis is increasingly ‘well put.’ The next step is to see that the problem is also well-solved,” they wrote.

Study co-authors include Kinsuk Chauhan MD, Priti Poojary MD, Aparna Saha MD, Elizabeth Hammer, MD, Joseph Vassalotti, MD, Lindsay Jubelt, MD, Bart Ferket MD, PhD, and Steven Coca DO, MS.

You may read the full text of the study on Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology

  1. National Estimates of Thirty Day Unplanned Readmissions of Patients on Maintenance Hemodialysis, published at http://cjasn.asnjournals.org/ on September 28, 2017, doi: 10.2215/CJN.02600317.
  2. Thirty-Day Hospital Readmissions in the Hemodialysis Population: A Problem Well Put, But Half-Solved, published at http://cjasn.asnjournals.org/ on September 28, 2017.

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