Table 1.
What treatment guidelines/algorithm, if any, do you use to treat your patients with ADPKD? |
82% None |
11% Clinical guidelines developed by the Caring for Australians with Renal Impairment |
7% Workshop results in Kidney International, literature-guided therapy, evidence-based literature, control of BP, and encouragement of increased water consumption |
What screening tools do you use to diagnose ADPKD? |
92% Ultrasonography |
3% Magnetic resonance imaging |
3% Molecular genetic testing |
1% Computed tomography |
1% None |
0% Urinary biomarkers |
What treatments have you used for your patients with ADPKD? |
42% Surgery |
29% Tolvaptan |
24% Other types of therapy (eg, BP monitoring, interventional radiology) |
3% Mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitors (eg, everolimus, sirolimus) |
1% Somatostatin analogues (eg, octreotide, lanreotide, pasireotide) |
What do you perceive to be the top needs in the management of ADPKD in Canada? |
Lack of general practitioners’ awareness of ADPKD |
Lack of management guidelines and care pathways |
Lack of knowledge of comprehensive integrated and accepted guidelines for the evaluation of extrarenal manifestations of ADPKD |
Lack of established diagnostic algorithms integrating clinical signs and symptoms with kidney imaging and genetic testing |
Lack of consensus on the optimal approach to predict prognosis |
Lack of therapeutic options |
Lack of clarity on subgroups of patients that may benefit from existing treatment |
Note. ADPKD = autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease; BP = blood pressure.