Background: Whole-exome sequencing (WES) increases the diagnostic rate of genetic kidney disorders, but accessibility, interpretation of results, and costs limit use in daily practice. Methods: Univariable analysis of a historical cohort of 392 patients who underwent WES for kidney diseases showed that resistance to treatments, familial history of kidney disease, extrarenal involvement, congenital abnormalities of the kidney and urinary tract and CKD stage ≥G2, two or more cysts per kidney on ultrasound, persistent hyperechoic kidneys or nephrocalcinosis on ultrasound, and persistent metabolic abnormalities were most predictive for genetic diagnosis. We prospectively applied these criteria to select patients in a network of nephrology centers, followed by centralized genetic diagnosis by WES, reverse phenotyping, and multidisciplinary board discussion. Results: We applied this multistep workflow to 476 patients with eight clinical categories (podocytopathies, collagenopathies, CKD of unknown origin, tubulopathies, ciliopathies, congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract, syndromic CKD, metabolic kidney disorders), obtaining genetic diagnosis for 319 of 476 patients (67.0%) (95% in 21 patients with disease onset during the fetal period or at birth, 64% in 298 pediatric patients, and 70% in 156 adult patients). The suspected clinical diagnosis was confirmed in 48% of the 476 patients and modified in 19%. A modeled cost analysis showed that application of this workflow saved 20% of costs per patient when performed at the beginning of the diagnostic process. Real cost analysis of 66 patients randomly selected from all categories showed actual cost reduction of 41%. Conclusions: A diagnostic workflow for genetic kidney diseases that includes WES is cost-saving, especially if implemented early, and is feasible in a real-world setting.
A Clinical Workflow for Cost-Saving High-Rate Diagnosis of Genetic Kidney Diseases / Becherucci, Francesca; Landini, Samuela; Palazzo, Viviana; Cirillo, Luigi; Raglianti, Valentina; Lugli, Gianmarco; Tiberi, Lucia; Dirupo, Elia; Bellelli, Stefania; Mazzierli, Tommaso; Lomi, Jacopo; Ravaglia, Fiammetta; Sansavini, Giulia; Allinovi, Marco; Giannese, Domenico; Somma, Chiara; Spatoliatore, Giuseppe; Vergani, Debora; Artuso, Rosangela; Rosati, Alberto; Cirami, Calogero; Dattolo, Pietro Claudio; Campolo, Gesualdo; De Chiara, Letizia; Papi, Laura; Vaglio, Augusto; Lazzeri, Elena; Anders, Hans-Joachim; Mazzinghi, Benedetta; Romagnani, Paola. - In: JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEPHROLOGY. - ISSN 1046-6673. - ELETTRONICO. - Publish Ahead of Print:(2023), pp. 0-0. [10.1681/ASN.0000000000000076]
A Clinical Workflow for Cost-Saving High-Rate Diagnosis of Genetic Kidney Diseases
Becherucci, Francesca;Raglianti, Valentina;De Chiara, Letizia;Papi, Laura;Vaglio, Augusto;Lazzeri, Elena;Romagnani, Paola
2023
Abstract
Background: Whole-exome sequencing (WES) increases the diagnostic rate of genetic kidney disorders, but accessibility, interpretation of results, and costs limit use in daily practice. Methods: Univariable analysis of a historical cohort of 392 patients who underwent WES for kidney diseases showed that resistance to treatments, familial history of kidney disease, extrarenal involvement, congenital abnormalities of the kidney and urinary tract and CKD stage ≥G2, two or more cysts per kidney on ultrasound, persistent hyperechoic kidneys or nephrocalcinosis on ultrasound, and persistent metabolic abnormalities were most predictive for genetic diagnosis. We prospectively applied these criteria to select patients in a network of nephrology centers, followed by centralized genetic diagnosis by WES, reverse phenotyping, and multidisciplinary board discussion. Results: We applied this multistep workflow to 476 patients with eight clinical categories (podocytopathies, collagenopathies, CKD of unknown origin, tubulopathies, ciliopathies, congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract, syndromic CKD, metabolic kidney disorders), obtaining genetic diagnosis for 319 of 476 patients (67.0%) (95% in 21 patients with disease onset during the fetal period or at birth, 64% in 298 pediatric patients, and 70% in 156 adult patients). The suspected clinical diagnosis was confirmed in 48% of the 476 patients and modified in 19%. A modeled cost analysis showed that application of this workflow saved 20% of costs per patient when performed at the beginning of the diagnostic process. Real cost analysis of 66 patients randomly selected from all categories showed actual cost reduction of 41%. Conclusions: A diagnostic workflow for genetic kidney diseases that includes WES is cost-saving, especially if implemented early, and is feasible in a real-world setting.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
---|---|---|---|
a_clinical_workflow_for_cost_saving_high_rate.19.pdf
Accesso chiuso
Tipologia:
Pdf editoriale (Version of record)
Licenza:
Tutti i diritti riservati
Dimensione
1.14 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
1.14 MB | Adobe PDF | Richiedi una copia |
I documenti in FLORE sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.