Chronic hemodialysis is associated with reduced fertility. Hence, pregnancy remains rare, challenging, and deleterious when unplanned, especially in low-resource countries. Contraception and births ...are very important in these settings. Though the main modes of contraception have been proposed in the chronic kidney disease (CKD) population, contraception still remains challenging in patients on maintenance hemodialysis. Most doctors, however, overlook contraception because of the low fertility, high rate of amenorrhea, and low libido. Furthermore, patients are less receptive to contraceptive counseling either because of a high desire to give birth or due to amenorrhea and low libido. Management of unplanned pregnancies is therefore very challenging and a multidisciplinary approach is the rule; however, it does not guarantee a good prognosis for both the mother and child. Very few cases of multiple pregnancies without induction of ovulation have been reported in patients with severe renal failure, especially those on maintenance dialysis. A 32-year-old multiparous woman with end-stage kidney failure (ESKF) and a residual diuresis of 700 mL per day who had been on inadequate maintenance hemodialysis for 36 months, presented with abdominal distension, which was confirmed on abdominal ultrasound to be a twin pregnancy at 22 weeks of gestation. Thereafter, we intensified hemodialysis (3 sessions/week), managed hypertension and anemia. The obstetrical course was uneventful until the 25th week of gestation when she developed grade 3 (WHO) hypertension and peripheral fluid overload. At the 29th week, she had a spontaneous vaginal preterm delivery of 2 babies weighing 1,350 g and 1,000 g, with an Apgar score of 8 and 7, respectively. Babies, however, died on day 1 and day 5 postpartum, respectively, from respiratory distress and early neonatal infection. The evolution of the mother was uneventful as she continued with her hemodialysis sessions. Twin pregnancies are a rare and very high-risk condition in end-stage renal disease and require multidisciplinary management.
chronic kidney disease affects one in ten adults in Cameroon. Haemodialysis was the only renal replacement therapy (for adults) in Cameroon and its sub-region until November 10, 2021. Thereafter ...through May 2022, the Yaoundé General Hospital successfully completed four living-donor kidney transplants. This paper examines policy implications.
medical records of cohorts of kidney failure patients who started haemodialysis at Yaoundé General Hospital in 2012 (n=106) and 2017 (n=118) were abstracted retrospectively through 2021 and their survival analyzed with Microsoft Excel and Kaplan-Meier curves. Using hospital data, the literature, and price indexes, the annual medical cost per patient of dialysis and living-donor kidney transplantation in 2022 prices was derived.
the 9.5-year survival rate for the 2012 cohort was 11% and the 5-year rate for the 2017 cohort was 18%. Annual haemodialysis cost per patient averaged $17,681 (26.5% from households and 73.5% from government). Initial transplantation costs averaged $10,530 per patient, all borne by the government. Under the brand-drug option, first-year transplantation follow-up costs $19,070 (4% for laboratory and 96% for drugs).
annually, haemodialysis in Cameroon costs per patient 12 times the country's average income ($1,537), driven especially by the costs of equipment purchase, maintenance, and consumables. Cameroon's initial cost of transplantation is lower than in other African countries. Generic drugs could lower annual follow-up costs by 89%. If Cameroon could achieve long-term survival with generic drugs after kidney transplantation, that modality would become a reasonable option for selected kidney failure patients (e.g. younger and without other comorbidities).