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Kidney Disease in African Americans

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Kidney Disease in African Americans

  • African Americans are four times more likely to develop kidney failure than

    Caucasians.1
  • African Americans make up 12 percent of the population but account for 30

    percent of people with kidney failure.1
  • Diabetes and high blood pressure account for about 70 percent of kidney

    failure in African Americans.1
  • A recent NKDEP survey of African Americans found that only 17 percent named

    kidney disease as a consequence of diabetes, and only eight percent named it as

    a consequence of high blood pressure.2
  • African American males ages 22 – 44 are 20 times more likely to develop

    kidney failure due to high blood pressure than Caucasian males in the same age

    group.1
  • Forty-five percent of African American men with kidney failure received late

    referrals to nephrologists. In some cases people were not aware they had a

    problem until they needed dialysis.3

Kidney Disease in the United States

  • Approximately 20 million Americans have kidney disease. The number of people

    diagnosed with kidney disease has doubled each decade for the last two

    decades.1
  • In 2001, there were about 400,000 people who had kidney failure, which

    requires dialysis or a kidney transplant to stay alive. By 2010, an estimated

    661,330 individuals will have kidney failure.1
  • The annual cost of treating patients with kidney failure in the U.S. is more

    than $20 billion.1
  • In 2000, about the same number of people died with kidney failure as with

    breast cancer and prostate cancer combined.4
  • The most common causes of kidney failure are diabetes and high blood

    pressure.1
  • Early kidney disease has no symptoms, and can become kidney failure with

    little or no warning if left undetected. When patients are not tested and

    treated for kidney disease early, it is usually discovered right before the

    kidneys fail.
  • Kidney failure can be effectively treated if detected

    early.5

  1. U.S. Renal Data System. (2002). National Institutes of Health,

    National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, Bethesda, MD.
  2. National Kidney Disease Education Program. (2003). NKDEP

    Survey of African American Adults’ Knowledge, Attitudes and Behaviors Related to

    Kidney Disease (Draft). National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney

    Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD.
  3. Kinchen KS, Sadler J, Fink N, et al: The timing of

    specialist evaluation in chronic kidney disease and mortality. Ann Intern

    Med
    137: 479-486, 2002.
  4. SEER, 2003.
  5. Hostetter, T. (2001). Prevention of end-state renal disease

    due to type 2 diabetes. New England Journal of Medicine, 345(12): 910-912.

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