Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is often described as a “silent” condition, and for good reason. In its early stages, patients are frequently asymptomatic, and the disease can progress unnoticed until significant damage has occurred and opportunities to slow disease progression and prevent complications become limited.
For providers and health plans, this represents more than a clinical challenge. It indicates the need for a paradigm shift, from managing advanced CKD to identifying risk earlier and intervening sooner.
Identifying CKD in its earlier stages allows providers to shift from reactive treatment to proactive disease management. This typically includes:
These interventions are well-established in slowing disease progression and reducing the risk of complications.
The impact of early intervention is significant. According to the Make the Change for Kidney Health Evidence Compendium published by the Global Patient Alliance for Kidney Health:
In practical terms, early identification creates an opportunity to slow progression, reduce cardiovascular risk, and potentially prevent kidney failure.
Although CKD is typically asymptomatic in the early stages, it is relatively straightforward to detect through simple blood and urine tests. CKD screening can be readily incorporated into routine care, particularly for patients with known risk factors such as diabetes or hypertension.
Screening typically involves:
Healthcare providers use an eGFR calculator to determine whether a patient’s test results meet the criteria for CKD. A confirmed diagnosis generally requires abnormal results on at least two occasions over a 90-day period.
Barriers to Early Identification
If detection is straightforward, why is CKD still so often diagnosed late? Several factors contribute:
Together, these challenges mean that many patients are not diagnosed until their disease has already advanced.
Early identification is only the first step. Effective management requires coordinated action across the care team, including the patient’s primary care provider, nephrologist, and other appropriate specialists. Key steps include:
When these elements are in place, patients are better positioned to maintain kidney function and avoid complications.
Early identification and risk stratification are foundational to Healthmap Solutions’ Kidney Population Health Management program. Healthmap works with health plans and providers to:
By focusing on earlier-stage and unspecified CKD, Healthmap helps shift care from reactive to proactive, supporting better clinical outcomes while reducing the likelihood of costly complications.
Historically, much of the focus has centered on treating advanced kidney disease and the high costs associated with ESRD. Today, attention is shifting earlier in the disease process, where intervention has the greatest opportunity to improve overall health and quality of life while preventing adverse outcomes.
By identifying CKD earlier, engaging providers and patients sooner, and supporting coordinated intervention, healthcare organizations can help slow disease progression, reduce cardiovascular risk, avoid unnecessary hospitalizations, and improve quality of life for patients living with kidney disease. The earlier kidney disease is identified, the greater the opportunity to change its trajectory and deliver better long-term outcomes for patients, providers, and payers alike.