A Propensity Analysis of Late Versus Early Nephrologist Referral and Mortality on Dialysis
Wolfgang C. Winkelmayer*,
William F. Owen, Jr.,
Raisa Levin* and
Jerry Avorn*
*Division of Pharmacoepidemiology and Pharmacoeconomics, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Womens Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts; and Duke Institute of Renal Outcomes Research & Health Policy, Duke University Medical Center, Duke University, Durhman, North Carolina.
Correspondence to Dr. Wolfgang C. Winkelmayer, Division of Pharmacoepidemiology and Pharmacoeconomics, Brigham and Womens Hospital, 221 Longwood Avenue, BLI/341, Boston, MA 02115. Phone: 617-278-0036; Fax: 617-232-8602;
ABSTRACT. Previous studies have analyzed the association betweenlate versus early nephrologist referral (LR, ER) and poor clinicaloutcomes in patients with end-stage renal disease. We soughtto determine whether these poor outcomes were causally relatedto LR, or whether LR was a proxy for poorer access to healthcare in general. An inception cohort of incident dialysis patientsenrolled in the New Jersey Medicare or Medicaid programs wasidentified. Using a large number of demographic, clinical, andhealth care utilization covariates, propensity scores (PS) werethen calculated to predict whether a given patient had beenseen by a nephrologist at 90 d before first dialysis. Cox proportionalhazards models were then built to test the association betweentiming of nephrologist referral and mortality during the firstyear of dialysis, using PS adjustment and matching to determinewhether this association was confounded by other measures ofreduced healthcare utilization. Neither adjustment for PS (HR= 1.31; 95% CI, 1.17 to 1.47) nor matching (HR = 1.40; 95% CI,1.23 to 1.59) materially changed the initial 36% excess mortalityin LR compared with ER patients (HR = 1.36; 95% CI, 1.22 to1.51). Excess mortality among LR was limited to the first 3mo of dialysis (HR = 1.75; 95% CI, 1.48 to 2.08) but not presentthereafter (HR = 1.03; 95% CI, 0.84 to 1.25). Late nephrologistreferral is an independent risk factor for early death on dialysis,even after controlling for other indicators of healthcare utilization.Further research is needed to identify patients at particularrisk so that interventions to prevent early deaths on dialysisin LR patients can be developed and tested. E-mail: wolfgang@post.harvard.edu
Several studies have examined the possible association betweenlate referral to a nephrologist and mortality on maintenancedialysis in patients with chronic kidney disease (18).Other analyses have measured the effect of LR on outcomes suchas timely vascular access creation (2,918), modalitychoice for renal replacement therapy (RRT), and technique survival(19,20) and health care costs (21). These analyses have madethe implicit assumption that the association between outcomesand the timing of referral was direct, controlling for all othervariables in the respective underlying multivariate models.Typically, the variables contained in such multivariate modelswere of demographic nature (age, race, gender, socioeconomicstatus) or related to comorbid conditions. It was implied, butnot proven, that the favorable associations in patients referredearly rather than late were a consequence of the nephrologistscontribution to their care. However, it is also possible thatlate nephrologist referral is merely a proxy for reduced accessto adequate health care overall. If this were the case, someor all of the improved outcomes associated with early referralmight instead simply be the result of better access to the healthcaresystem or an overall higher quality of care independent of nephrologistinput.
Propensity scores are a tool that can correct for nonrandomexposure assignment and have been shown to reduce such potentialbias in observational studies (22). The propensity score isthe expected probability of receiving one treatment over anotherfor a given patient, based on that patients baselinecharacteristics. Typically, a logistic regression model of theactual treatment received is fit to the data, and the propensityscore for each patient is then estimated. Numerous covariatesas well as higher order terms and covariate interactions canthus be condensed into a single scalar variable, the propensityscore (23,24). Several studies have demonstrated that propensityscores can reduce bias in observational studies to balance observedbaseline covariates in two treatment groups. Once estimated,propensity scores can be used for analyses of outcomes as covariatesin multivariate models, as matching factors, or to define stratafor separate analyses. The use of propensity scores in analyzingthe association between timing of first nephrologist referraland mortality during the first year of RRT offers a novel approachto compensate for potential differences in healthcare accessand utilization among late referral versus early referral patients.
The present analysis carried forward our previous findings ofreduced survival on RRT in patients with delayed first referralto a nephrologist (8). We studied a large population of incidentperitoneal and hemodialysis patients enrolled in the Medicaid,Medicare, or Pharmaceutical Assistance for the Aged and Disabledprograms in the state of New Jersey who had progressed chronicallyrather than acutely to end-stage renal failure (ESRD) (n = 3014)and required chronic renal replacement therapy. To restrictthe cohort in this fashion, we studied only patients who hadbeen diagnosed with a renal disease >1 yr before first dialysis.We excluded patients who received only a single dialysis andsurvived >1 mo thereafter or who received a limited seriesof dialysis treatments and survived >2 mo. This approachdefined an inception cohort of 3014 patients starting dialysisbetween 1991 and mid-1996. Timing of nephrologist referral wasdichotomized; patients who saw a nephrologist >90 d beforetheir first chronic dialysis were labeled as early referrals(ER), and all others were considered late referrals (LR). Alltraceable identifiers were removed before analysis to protectpatient confidentiality. The study was approved by the institutionalreview board of our institution.
We calculated propensity scores using a logistic regressionmodel, with timing of referral (LR versus ER) as the outcomestudied. To build the propensity score model, we selected patientcharacteristics and healthcare utilization indicators in the4 to 12 mo before the initiation of dialysis (Figure 1). Wealso included a number of higher order terms and covariate interactions(Tables 1 and 2). Model fit and predictive power were assessedusing the c statistic. A c statistic of 1 indicates perfectprediction, whereas a value of 0.5 reflects random chance (25).
Table 2. Patient characteristics by timing of first nephrologist referral
For the outcomes model we built a multivariate Cox proportionalhazards model. Here, death was the outcome of interest; patientswere censored at the earliest of 365 d after first dialysis,renal transplantation, loss to follow-up, and end of study period.The covariates that were entered into this outcomes model wereassessed in the year before first dialysis (Figure 1). Thosecovariates were age (continuous), gender, race (White/Black/other),socioeconomic status, and a number of baseline comorbid conditions.The original models had adjusted for underlying renal diseaseor for a limited set of nonrenal comorbidities (hypertension,coronary artery disease, congestive heart failure, diabetesmalignancy), but not for differences in healthcare utilization(8). The baseline model used here differs from the one publishedpreviously in that it contains a large number of comorbid conditionsrather than renal diagnoses to control for confounding (8).Propensity scores were then used in two ways (23). First, weentered the propensity scores (in quintiles) into the same modelfor which the initial findings were first described. Second,we ran the same model within a population of 1039 pairs of patientsfrom the late referral group and the early referral group whowere matched by their propensity score. The propensity matchingwas conducted using the "greedy match" macro (26). We then soughtto determine whether such control over the level of healthcareutilization changed the association between late referral andmortality in the first year of maintenance dialysis. For sensitivityanalyses, we determined whether a patient had initiated dialysison peritoneal dialysis or hemodialysis. Among those on hemodialysis,we created two variables indicating whether a peripheral vascularaccess procedure was performed (a) before first dialysis and(b) >14 d before onset of hemodialysis. The specific algorithmsused to identify patients who started on peritoneal dialysisand who underwent surgery for peripheral vascular access beforeRRT among starters on hemodialysis have been published in detailpreviously (18).
Of the 3014 patients who comprised the cohort, 1429 patientsdied during the first year of dialysis. Twenty-one patientsreceived a renal transplant during the first year and were censored.The remaining 1564 patients completed the 1-yr follow-up orwere censored at the end of the database (June 30, 1996); nopatient was lost for follow-up during the period of study. Table 3shows the number of patients who died, were transplanted,or were censored by timing of referral and time period. Theconventional model without inclusion of propensity scores indicatedthat patients who first saw a nephrologist 90 d before onsetof dialysis had a 36% higher mortality rate compared with thosewho had their first nephrologist visit earlier (Hazards ratio[HR] = 1.36; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.22 to 1.51) (8).Other characteristics that were associated with increased mortalitywere congestive heart failure (HR = 1.86; 95% CI 1.62 to 2.14),cancer (HR = 1.14; 95% CI, 1.01 to 1.29), cerebrovascular disease(HR = 1.15; 95% CI, 1.02 to 1.30), peripheral vascular disease(HR = 1.24; 95% CI, 1.09 to 1.41), liver disease (HR = 1.59;95% CI, 1.20 to 2.10), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease(HR = 1.28; 95% CI, 1.14 to 1.43), and drug or alcohol abuse(HR = 1.50; 95% CI, 1.24 to 1.81). We then built the logisticregression model to estimate the likelihood of late referral(i.e., the propensity score) for each patient, using all covariateslisted in Table 1. The c statistic of the propensity score modelindicated moderate prediction of late versus early referral(c= 0.683). When introducing quintiles of propensity scoresinto the otherwise identical Cox proportional hazards model,the effect estimate of LR versus ER on mortality was quite similar;patients referred late were now at a 31% higher risk of deathcompared with those referred >90 d before onset of chronicdialysis (HR = 1.31; 95% CI, 1.17 to 1.46). All other parameterestimates remained nearly identical.
Table 3. Number of individuals at baseline, censored, and deaths by time interval and referral status
Propensity scores were successfully matched on all 1039 LR patientsto one patient each from the ER pool (n = 2078). A Kaplan-Meierplot of patient survival confirmed that patients who actuallywere referred late had a lower survival in the first year ofmaintenance dialysis compared with those who were referred toa nephrologist earlier, even in comparison with comparable patientswho had the same expected likelihood of late referral basedon their demographic characteristics and clinical and healthcareutilization experience (Figure 2). Similarly, the correspondingCox proportional hazards model revealed a 40% higher mortalityrate during the first year among LR compared with ER (HR = 1.40;95% CI, 1.23 to 1.59). Including the healthcare utilizationcovariates in the outcomes model as well did not change theresults (see Table 4).
Table 4. Effect estimates of the late versus early nephrologist referral association
We next examined the time course of the observed mortality difference.On the basis of the Kaplan-Meier survival curve, the excessmortality rate among LR versus ER patients appeared limitedto the first few months of RRT. We tested the validity of thisimpression by building two interval Cox models: one from onsetof dialysis to 90 d of dialysis, the second one evaluating patientswho survived 90 d of dialysis until 365 d after onset of maintenancedialysis. Indeed, the detrimental effect of late referral waslimited to the first 3 mo, during which patients who were referredto a nephrologist late had a 75% excess mortality compared withthose who were referred early (HR = 1.75; 95% CI, 1.48 to 2.08).After day 90 of maintenance dialysis, the death rate betweenthose two groups was not different (HR = 1.03; 95% CI, 0.84to 1.25).
We speculated whether the superior 90-d survival of patientswho were referred early was attributable to modality choiceor to vascular access creation among those starting on hemodialysis.A formal test of such a proposition is a significance test ofan interaction between timing of referral and first treatmentmodality (peritoneal dialysis versus hemodialysis) in the fullcohort, and between timing of referral and vascular access surgerybefore first dialysis among those initiating treatment on hemodialysis.Within the propensity-matched cohort, we found that baselinemodality choice was not an effect modifier of the associationbetween LR and 90-d mortality. The interaction term was nonsignificant(P = 0.84), and the main effect of LR was only slightly attenuated(HR = 1.66; 95% CI, 1.19 to 2.32). Similarly, we did not finda significant interaction between timing of referral and vascularaccess surgery before onset of dialysis on early mortality.While peripheral vascular access placement before first dialysiswas associated with a survival benefit over the first 90 d ofdialysis (HR = 0.66; 95% CI, 0.47 to 0.93), the test for effectmodification remained nonsignificant (P = 0.66). Again, theeffect estimate for the LR covariate remained materially unchanged.In a sensitivity analysis, we created a covariate that indicatedwhether a peripheral vascular access was created >14 d beforefirst dialysis, thus making it more likely that the peripheralvascular access was used for the first dialysis. However, theresults remained nearly identical to the ones described above.
The purpose of this study was to test whether the first-yearmortality benefit enjoyed by patients who first saw a nephrologist>90 d before dialysis might have been simply a surrogatefor better healthcare access overall, rather than the benefitof subspecialist care. The introduction of propensity scoresthat included parameters of healthcare utilization did not materiallychange the estimate of this effect (HR = 1.36 1.31). Evaluatinga cohort of pairs matched on propensity score also did not changethe original finding materially (HR = 1.36 1.40). In all cases,late referral remained an important predictor of mortality inthe first year of maintenance dialysis, even after such meansof bias reduction (see Table 3).
These data indicate that late nephrologist referral is not simplya proxy for overall poor healthcare access/utilization, butthat there is probably a specific and substantial contributionby nephrologists during preparation for dialysis that reducesearly mortality.
A second finding is that the detrimental association of delayednephrologist referral with mortality has its effect during thefirst 90 d of dialysis but not thereafter. This seeming disparitybetween the current finding and previous work is probably becausethe proportionality assumption was either not tested or notfound to be significant (18). Of these studies, onlythe recent article by Jungers et al. (7) provides a Kaplan-Meierplot depicting survival by length of nephrologist care beforeRRT. Their plot also indicates that the effect of later referralon survival is most pronounced during the first months of RRT.This pattern of early survival benefit after RRT can be explainedby the concept of "depletion of susceptibles" (27), a form ofsurvival bias. That is, those patients who are vulnerable tothe effects of suboptimal preparation for RRT die at an excessrate, whereas those who are more robust are more likely to survive.Moreover, after depletion of those "susceptibles" the survivalexperience of the remaining subjects is indistinguishable fromthose who saw a nephrologist in a timely fashion. This conceptwould also suggest that associations between mortality and timingof first nephrologist referral or duration of nephrologist careare driven solely by the excess mortality of late referralswithin the first few months of RRT.
We hypothesized that the benefits of early referral might bemediated through more educated decisions regarding modalitychoice and via timely creation of peripheral vascular access.When testing these hypotheses formally, we found that neithermodality choice nor presence of a peripheral vascular accessbefore onset of dialysis modified the association between LRand 90-d survival, indicating that other measures of care areinstrumental in providing the survival benefit among ER. Thecurrent analysis does not permit us to define these other componentsof nephrology care that are probably associated with a reductionin medium or long-term mortality. However, on the basis of extrapolationfrom processes of care in prevalent ESRD patients, it is likelythat interventions such as improved BP control, treatment ofanemia, improved nutrition, managing derangements in divalention metabolism, etc. may contribute to this putative benefit(28).
Limitations of the present study include the use of claims data,which may be compromised by patient and data miscoding, missingdata elements, and misclassification. An a priori assumptionis made that these limitations occur in a random rather thansystematic way, supporting the internal validity of the study.The overall similarity of our findings to those reported byothers spanning a large period of time and multiple geographiessuggest that these biases are not a major confounder. Similarly,it is likely that there is residual confounding arising fromlimited characterization of the severity of comorbid conditions.Additional clinical and laboratory information is unavailablethat could enhance the robustness of our models and could serveas explanatory variables. For example, it would be of interestto have information on the rate of decline of residual renalfunction for inclusion into the propensity score model. Usingsuch information, the predictive power of the model would likelybe increased, which would lead to further bias reduction. Themoderate prediction of the propensity score model (c= 0.683)indicates that several cofactors that contribute to the referraldecision remained unobserved, thus leaving the possibility ofresidual confounding by such unobserved data.
Because this study captured information on patients who wereolder and/or indigent, further work will be needed to determinetheir generalizability to younger and less indigent populationsor to populations in other geographic regions. Also, the resultsof this study do not apply to patients with acute renal failureor those patients who are not diagnosed with chronic kidneydisease until shortly before the need for RRT.
These findings indicate that early referral to a nephrologistremains important in influencing the course of patients withchronic kidney disease progressing to ESRD, even after adjustingfor other patterns of healthcare utilization during the predialysisphase. Furthermore, it seems that the deleterious effects oflate referral occur within the first few months of RRT. Thesefindings suggest important research and policy implications.If late patient referral does occur, extensive corrective interventionsmay have greater benefit if offered early after resuming RRT.Further research is needed to identify those at highest riskwithin the late referral population, and appropriate modelsof care delivery for the first months of RRT need to be developedand tested in this vulnerable population.
Acknowledgments
This study was supported by grants from the Agency for HealthCare Research and Quality (HS-09398) and the National Instituteon Aging (R03-AG-1839501).
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Received for publication July 29, 2002.
Accepted for publication October 21, 2002.
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