Lupus nephritis outcomes: health maintenance organizations compared to non-health maintenance organizations
- PMID: 10782813
Lupus nephritis outcomes: health maintenance organizations compared to non-health maintenance organizations
Abstract
Objective: Patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) in USA increasingly have their care centered in health maintenance organizations (HMO). We examined whether HMO and non-HMO SLE patients with renal involvement, who had the same university rheumatologist, differed in their utilization of health care or renal outcomes.
Methods: Consecutive patients with SLE with renal involvement (n = 24), 10 enrolled in an HMO, 14 not, were studied. Laboratory values were prospectively determined.
Results: At the first visit to the rheumatologist, there was no significant difference between HMO and non-HMO patients in laboratory values. There was no difference in the 2 groups in the final prednisone dose (HMO 12 mg vs non-HMO 15.9 mg) or use of azathioprine (20% vs. 57%; p = 0.07) or cyclophosphamide (60% vs. 57%). The serum creatinine was higher in the HMO patients (HMO 1.1 mg/dl vs. non-HMO 0.78 mg/dl; p = 0.05). No difference was found in the number of rheumatology visits. There was a significant difference in the number of communications from the rheumatologist to the HMO versus the HMO to the rheumatologist (p = 0.026).
Conclusion: Other than the serum creatinine, there are no differences in the treatment or renal outcomes for HMO compared to non-HMO patients with SLE seeing the same rheumatologist. There is a potential barrier in physician communication, however, with the majority of communications going from the rheumatologist to the HMO provider.
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