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Australian Health Review Australian Health Review Society
Journal of the Australian Healthcare & Hospitals Association

Just Accepted

This article has been peer reviewed and accepted for publication. It is in production and has not been edited, so may differ from the final published form.

The incidence of cardiac surgery in adults with treated kidney failure in Australia: a retrospective cohort study

Dominic Keuskamp, Christopher Davies, Robert Baker, Kevan Polkinghorne, Chris Reid, Julian Smith, Lavinia Tran, Jenni Williams-Spence, rory wolfe, Stephen McDonald

Abstract

Abstract Objective Kidney failure increases people’s risk of cardiovascular disease, sometimes requiring cardiac surgery. The aim of this study was to estimate the risk of cardiac surgery for adults with treated kidney failure in comparison with the general population in Australia. Methods We performed a population-based retrospective cohort study by linking data between the Australia and New Zealand Dialysis and Transplant Registry and the Australian and New Zealand Society of Cardiac and Thoracic Surgeons Cardiac Surgery Database, for 2010-2019. Age-sex-standardised surgery risk relative to the general population was estimated for adults receiving long-term dialysis and kidney transplant recipients, and subpopulations defined by procedure type, comorbidity, clinical status and dialysis-related factors. Results Among 1,541 adults receiving treatment for kidney failure at the time of cardiac surgery in 2010-2019, the prevalence of comorbidity and risk factors was usually highest in those receiving dialysis, followed by transplant recipients and the general population (n=113,126). For all major cardiac surgical procedure types, the incidence of surgery for adults receiving dialysis and transplant recipients exceeded that for the general population (e.g. isolated coronary artery bypass grafting relative rates 15.3 [95% CI 13.7,17.0] and 2.0 [1.6,2.6] respectively). Relative incidence was especially high for the dialysis cohorts with insulin-treated diabetes and those with BMI <25 kg/m2. Conclusions Adults with treated kidney failure had a higher risk of cardiac surgery than the general population in Australia in 2010-2019, especially when associated with diabetes. Data linkage between clinical quality registries enabled estimation of the extent of cardiac surgical burden.

AH24188  Accepted 04 December 2024

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