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Diabetes Care, Vol 15, Issue 9 1226-1238, Copyright © 1992 by American Diabetes Association


ARTICLES

Diabetic nephropathy. Management of the end-stage patient

MS Markell and EA Friedman
Department of Medicine, SUNY Health Science Center, Brooklyn 11203.

Diabetic nephropathy is currently the leading cause of new patients requiring dialysis in the United States. Management of the diabetic patient with ESRD is complicated by the frequent coexistence of complications affecting other organ systems, including retinopathy, cardiovascular disease, peripheral neuropathy, or autonomic neuropathy, manifested as gastroparesis, diarrhea or obstipation, cystopathy, or orthostatic hypotension. Associated clinical syndromes must be followed and treated, if possible, while preparing the patient to receive renal replacement therapy. Both the clinical condition and the psychosocial environment are key factors in choice of ESRD therapy for an individual patient. Rehabilitation data are best for patients who undergo kidney transplantation, but these data are confounded by the fact that the healthiest patients are referred for this treatment modality. Living, related kidney transplant is the preferred initial choice for the diabetic patient with kidney disease. At most centers, both in the United States and abroad, the cadaveric transplant is the second choice for uremia therapy. At the appropriate institution, the patient with type I diabetes may also be considered for a simultaneous cadaveric pancreas transplant. While awaiting cadaveric transplantation, or if contraindication to transplantation is present (chronic infection, recent malignancy, or severe cardiac disease), diabetic patients with severe impairment of the glomerular filtration rate (less than 10-15 ml/min) are referred for vascular access placement and/or insertion of a peritoneal catheter. The decision regarding the choice of CAPD vs. hemodialysis must be made on an individual basis. Rehabilitation and survival data for these therapies are similar, although technique survival rates for CAPD decline dramatically as time progresses because of infectious complications. In-center hemodialysis has the worst survival and rehabilitation profile, but the sickest, most debilitated patients with the highest number of comorbid conditions tend to be referred for that therapeutic modality. Most studies of rehabilitation were performed before use of recombinant human erythropoietin, and comparison between ESRD treatment modalities will have to be reevaluated now that the drug is routinely used.
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Copyright © 1992 by the American Diabetes Association.