Journal
JOURNAL OF NEPHROLOGY
Volume 26, Issue 4, Pages 763-770Publisher
WICHTIG EDITORE
DOI: 10.5301/jn.5000234
Keywords
Haemodialysis; Patient survival; Positive outcomes; spKt/V; Treatment time
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Background: Analyses of national registry-based datasets have demonstrated the association of longer haemodialysis treatment times with lowered mortality risk. Methods: We performed a prospective cohort study of 451 incident haemodialysis patients and examined the effect of targeting higher dialysis dose with extended treatment time, on 10-year patient outcomes. Results: Mean treatment time (TT) was 233 +/- 22.8 minutes (median 235, range 180-296). Overall patient survival was 95% at 1 year, 75% at 3 years, 56% at 5 years and 25% at 10 years. Increasing TT was associated with incremental 10-year patient survival (TT >= 241 minutes 39.7%, TT 226-240 minutes 19.6% and TT <= 225 minutes 14.7%; p<0.001). Single pool Kt/V and TT were strong independent predictors of patient survival in Cox multivariate analysis (p<0.0001). At 10 years, each 0.1-unit increase in spKt/V and 20-minute increase in TT were associated with a 20% and 32% decrease in the relative risk of death, respectively. Survival benefits of higher dialysis dose and longer TT were cumulative, with highest survival exhibited by patients achieving both Kt/V >1.6 and TT >= 241 minutes, and lowest survival exhibited by patients receiving Kt/V <1.2 and TT <= 225 minutes. Conclusion: Extended treatment times are associated with higher patient survival irrespective of dialysis dose. Further study of extended treatment time and effect on patient outcomes is needed.
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