Epoetin Alfa Use in Patients With ESRD: An Analysis of Recent US Prescribing Patterns and Hemoglobin Outcomes

Background: It is unknown to what degree physicians adjust erythropoietin doses to achieve hemoglobin levels (11.0 to 12.0 g/dL [110 to 120 g/L]) recommended by the National Kidney Foundation–Kidney Disease Outcomes Quality Initiative (NKF-K/DOQI) for patients with end-stage renal disease receiving...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of kidney diseases 2005-09, Vol.46 (3), p.481-488
Hauptverfasser: Collins, Allan J., Brenner, Robert M., Ofman, Joshua J., Chi, Eric M., Stuccio-White, Nina, Krishnan, Mahesh, Solid, Craig, Ofsthun, Norma J., Lazarus, J. Michael
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background: It is unknown to what degree physicians adjust erythropoietin doses to achieve hemoglobin levels (11.0 to 12.0 g/dL [110 to 120 g/L]) recommended by the National Kidney Foundation–Kidney Disease Outcomes Quality Initiative (NKF-K/DOQI) for patients with end-stage renal disease receiving hemodialysis. Our objective is to examine epoetin alfa prescribing patterns for achieving the target hemoglobin level range in this population. Methods: Monthly hemoglobin levels and epoetin alfa doses from 2 large databases were retrospectively analyzed. One data set comprised 31,267 patients from the Fresenius Medical Care–North America (FMC-NA) database, and the other comprised 128,761 patients based on claims for Medicare services. Results: Longitudinal evaluation of the FMC-NA data set showed that hemoglobin levels in patients administered epoetin alfa cycled in and out of the NKF-K/DOQI hemoglobin target range, and doses were decreased in 98.8% of patients with persistent hemoglobin levels greater than 12.0 g/dL (>120 g/L). Hemoglobin levels in patients from the Medicare data set that initially were outside the target range migrated into the range with epoetin alfa dose titration. FMC-NA patients with a 3-month average hemoglobin level less than 11.0 g/dL (120 g/L; 21,838 versus 13,503 U/wk; P < 0.0001). Less than 0.4% of patients administered epoetin alfa were persistently anemic (hemoglobin < 11.0 g/dL [30,000 U/wk), but failed to respond with a 0.5-g/dL or greater (≥5-g/L) increase in hemoglobin levels. Conclusion: In these analyses, few hemodialysis patients experienced persistent anemia while being administered high epoetin alfa doses. Physicians appeared to appropriately adjust doses to achieve hemoglobin levels recommended by the NKF-K/DOQI guidelines.
ISSN:0272-6386
1523-6838
DOI:10.1053/j.ajkd.2005.05.018