Congress must protect kidney disease patients during the COVID-19 pandemic

Congress must protect kidney disease patients during the COVID-19 pandemic

As we continue to combat the unprecedented health and economic emergency caused by COVID-19, it’s critical that we take every possible step to ensure the health of vulnerable patient populations, including the nearly 38 million Americans who suffer from chronic kidney disease (CKD). Before this crisis erupted, kidney patients faced major obstacles accessing medical care. Now, with a growing body of research , government data and CDC warnings showing COVID-19’s disproportionate impact on kidney patients, especially minorities, policymakers must take proactive steps to ensure CKD patients can access care safely while avoiding exposure.

The multi-faceted kidney provider community has continued to deliver dialysis care to patients with End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD), or kidney failure, during this crisis. But non-dialysis CKD patients still face increased risks in safely treating iron deficiency anemia (IDA)––a common complication of CKD which significantly decreases a patient’s quality of life and capacity to work, increases risk of heart attack and stroke, and accelerates the progression to kidney failure. IDA develops in the early stages of disease when the patient loses between 20 to 50 percent of normal kidney function. IDA in non-dialysis CKD patients has traditionally been treated with intravenous infusions which increase iron levels quickly enough to avoid health complications. But IV infusions are risky and painful, and as a 40-year kidney patient who has suffered from anemia I know this first-hand.

Unfortunately, Medicare patients with renal anemia must still travel to outpatient facilities to receive IV treatment. Much like dialysis patients , these patients face increased stress and risk of viral exposure when visiting outpatient care and infusion centers. To address this situation, one wise step lawmakers can take to ensure patients are able to safely treat their renal anemia would be to restore patient choice and access to the one FDA-approved oral therapy for IDA instead of intravenous infusion.

The oral therapy, ferric citrate coordination complex, is an innovative compound that has been clinically proven to effectively treat iron deficiency anemia in kidney patients not on dialysis. The drug is oral, allowing patients to remain safely at home, avoid COVID-19 exposure and bypass the added burden of visiting overwhelmed outpatient facilities. Since the FDA approval of the oral drug in 2014, ferric citrate has been hailed by physician groups, patients, and kidney advocacy organizations like the American Association of Kidney Patients as a safe and cost-effective treatment choice for renal anemia.

Yet, despite the clear advantage […]

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