Kidney Disease Related Death in Working Age Group Over a Ten-Year Period at One Selected Public Hospital in Myanmar: A Retrospective Descriptive Study
Khin Phyu Pyar, Thi Han Tun, Myint Zaw, Thet Naing, Aung Kyaw Oo, Moe Zaw Myint, Aung Myo, Khaing Lwin, et al. (17 authors)
Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) · 2026-01
Abstract
Introduction: The prevalence of non-communicable disease is increasing world-wide; chronic kidney disease is one of them. The burden of kidney disease related mortality in working age group was not reported from Myanmar. Methods: A hospital based retrospective descriptive study was conducted in one selected public hospital in Yangon, Myanmar. The design focused on analyzing data from brought-in-deaths (BID) and hospital admission deaths (HAD) among the working age group (18-62 years) over a 10-year period; January 1, 2015 to December 31, 2024. All cases underwent postmortem examination done by a forensic surgeon for BID cases and a pathologist for HAD cases. And the cause of death was verified. Results: A total of 3,087 death cases were reviewed from hospital records; a quarter (744/3,087; 24.1%) was BID cases and two third (2,343/3,087; 75.9%) was HAD cases. Mean age was 44 years (SD ± 12). Gastrointestinal and hepatobiliary diseases were the most prevalent cause among all deaths, accounting for half of them (50.5%). The remaining cause of death in order of frequency were as follows: hypertension (37.1%), cardiac diseases (27.4%), hematological diseases (22%), tuberculosis (20%), renal diseases (16.2%), malignancy (15%), surgery related death (12.3%), chronic obstructive airway disease (COPD) (11%), HIV infection (10%), stroke (9%), autoimmune diseases (9%), accidents and injury (9%), diabetes mellitus (6%), and poisoning including suicide & homicide (3%). Nearly 85% of cases had more than one disease. Of all deaths, communicable diseases (CDs) attributed 30%; and 46% were due to non-communicable diseases (NCDs). Among all deaths due to renal diseases, acute kidney injury (AKI) was noted in 10%; chronic kidney disease/end stage renal disease (CKD/ESRD) was seen in 90%. AKI was mainly associated with septicaemia and volume loss; septicemia led to septic shock multi-organ failure (acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), and disseminated intravascular coagulation DIC). Those deaths with CKD/ESRD had co-morbid diseases like hypertension (90%), diabetes mellitus (10%), ischemic heart disease and heart failure (25%), cerebrovascular accidents (10%), COPD (10%), autoimmune diseases (10%) and chronic liver disease with portal hypertension (5%). Regarding the proportion of BID and HAD cases in renal disease related deaths, only one percent them was BID and almost all (99%) were HAD indicating they received in-patient-care. Conclusion: Number of death due to non-communicable diseases (NCDs) was higher than that of communicable diseases (NCDs) among working age group in 10 years retrospective study; kidney disease was sixth leading cause of death. Chronic kidney disease/ESRD attributed 90% of kidney disease related deaths and they had associated co-morbid diseases. Hypertension was the most common co-morbid disease. To reduce the kidney disease related morbidity and mortality in working age group, hospital in-patient-care was not adequate. We need to strengthen preventive measures, early detection and treatment of non-communicable diseases (hypertension, diabetes mellitus, CKD), health education and life style modification to delay/prevent the development of CKD. Management of CKD should be placed on the global/national public health agenda.
MeSH terms
- Medicine
- Retrospective cohort study
- Kidney disease
- Cause of death
- Diabetes mellitus
- Disease
- Pediatrics
- Public health
- Epidemiology
- Tuberculosis
- Acute kidney injury
- Stroke (engine)
- Mortality rate
- Malignancy
- Emergency medicine
- Nephropathy
- Internal medicine
- Intensive care medicine