The Detrimental Impact of End-Stage Kidney Disease Is Not Reflected in Autopsy Reports

Author:

Lerner Gabriel B.1,Reynolds Meredith A.2,Setty Suman3,Deeb Reem3,Rastogi Prerna4,Moeckel Gilbert1,Sanchez Harold1,Henriksen Kammi J.2,Chang Anthony2

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Surgical Pathology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut (Lerner, Moeckel, Sanchez)

2. the Department of Pathology, University of Chicago School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois (Reynolds, Henriksen, Chang)

3. the Departments of Pathology (Setty) and Medicine (Deeb), University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago

4. the Department of Pathology, University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine, Iowa City (Rastogi)

Abstract

Context.— End-stage kidney disease (ESKD) is defined as renal impairment requiring renal replacement therapy to sustain life. With a 1-year mortality of ∼20% to 30%, many die of complications related to this disease. Objective.— To determine the percentage of autopsy cases of decedents with ESKD in which the contribution of ESKD to death is accurately reflected in the final report. Design.— Autopsy case records were retrospectively reviewed at 4 institutions (Yale New Haven Hospital, University of Chicago Medical Center, University of Illinois at Chicago Hospital, University of Iowa Hospital). Clinical, macroscopic, and microscopic autopsy findings were reviewed, with attention to renal disease findings. Results.— One hundred sixty decedents with documented ESKD and premortem dialysis who underwent autopsy assessment were identified. ESKD was implicated as a cause of death (CoD) or significant contributing factor in 44 cases (28%), but not in the remaining 116 cases (72%). Cardiovascular disease was the most common CoD in ESKD. There was significant interpathologist variation in the inclusion of ESKD as a CoD across institutions. These rates ranged from 85% correlation (23 of 27 cases), to 13% (4 of 31 and 8 of 62 cases at 2 institutions), and 22.5% (9 of 40 cases) across the 4 participating institutions. Conclusions.— The recognition at autopsy of ESKD as a CoD or contributing CoD at autopsy in patients undergoing dialysis remains low (28%). The detrimental impact of ESKD is not reflected in hospital autopsy reports, which carries implications for collection of vital statistics and allocation of research funding for kidney diseases.

Publisher

Archives of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine

Subject

Medical Laboratory Technology,General Medicine,Pathology and Forensic Medicine

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