Introduction: This review article reports clinical outcomes and performance indicators of patients with kidney failure (KF) and acute kidney injuries (AKI) in Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) countries.
Methodology: Association of South East Asian Nations data, segregated by income status, from national registries and literature were collated, compared and benchmarked against international references.
Results: The national incidence and prevalence of treated KF ranged from 172 to 479 per million population (pmp) and 36-2255 pmp, respectively. Brunei (79%), Malaysia (66%) and Singapore (66%) had world-leading proportions of diabetes-related KF. Hemodialysis (HD), Peritoneal Dialysis (PD) and transplant accounted for 68-100%, 0-27% and 0-18% of all KF replacement therapy, respectively. Transplant patient survival was superior with 90%-93% at 5 years and 71%-90% at 10 years, compared to PD (44%-54%) and HD (53-64%) at 5 years. Higher-income countries were able to achieve good anemia control, HD and PD adequacy targets, while usage of arteriovenous fistula in HD varied from 70% to 85%. Acute Kidney Injury rates ranged from 24.2% to 49.2% of high-dependency admissions. Lower incidences of PD peritonitis and HD catheter-related Bloodstream Infections; and PD-favouring quality-of-life were evident in higher-income countries.
Conclusion: Association of South East Asian Nations has a challenging burden of kidney disease, with extremely high incidence, prevalence, DM-related KF and AKI rates. The magnitude of the prevailing problem calls for the creation of a regional society under the auspices of ASEAN with a shared perspective of universal, equitable and charitable access to quality renal care; consistent with the founding premises and healthcare initiatives of ASEAN.
Keywords: ASEAN; acute kidney injury; hemodialysis; kidney failure; peritoneal dialysis; transplant.
© 2022 Asian Pacific Society of Nephrology.