Volume 48 | Number 3 | June 2013

Abstract List

Yi Zhang Ph.D., Mae Thamer Ph.D., Onkar Kshirsagar, Dennis J. Cotter


Objective

Examine the mediating effect of injectable drugs in the relationship between dialysis facility organizational status and patient mortality.


Study Setting

Medicare dialysis population.


Study Design

Data from the U.S. Renal Data System () were used to identify 3,884 freestanding dialysis facilities and 37,942 Medicare patients incident to end‐stage renal disease () in 2006. The role of injectable medications was evaluated during a 2‐year follow‐up period by mediational analyses using mixed‐effect regression models.


Data Collection

data were matched with ialysis acility eport data from enters for edicare and edicaid Services () and census data.


Principal Findings

There was a strong association found between organizational status and use of injectable drugs. Large for‐profit chains used significantly higher injectable medications compared with nonprofit chains and independent facilities. However, the relationship between facility organizational status and patient mortality was not found to be mediated through the higher use of injectable drugs.


Conclusions

Large for‐profit chain facilities administered higher IV epoetin, iron, and vitamin D dosages, but this did not result in improved survival. Given the associated costs and lack of a survival benefit, the overuse of injectable medications among the U.S. dialysis patients will likely end under the recent bundling of injectable medications without jeopardizing patient outcomes.