4.0 Article

Physical activity in hemodialysis patients on nondialysis and dialysis days: Prospective observational study

Journal

HEMODIALYSIS INTERNATIONAL
Volume 25, Issue 2, Pages 240-248

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/hdi.12913

Keywords

hemodialysis; Fitbit; end‐ stage kidney disease

Funding

  1. Satellite Coplon award
  2. Academic Community UCSD grant
  3. National Institute for Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases [K24 DK110427]

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The study found that hemodialysis patients are frequently sedentary, with older patients being more inactive. These findings may help in developing interventions to increase physical activity among hemodialysis patients.
Introduction The physical decline in patients with end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) is associated with morbidity and mortality. Prior studies have attempted to promote physical activity at the time of dialysis; however, physical activity patterns on the nondialysis days are unknown. This study aimed to quantify physical activity on dialysis and nondialysis days in hemodialysis patients using a wearable actigraph. Methods In this prospective study, subjects receiving hemodialysis were recruited from two outpatient dialysis units in urban San Diego and rural Imperial County, CA, between March 2018 and April 2019. Key inclusion criteria included: (1) receiving thrice weekly hemodialysis for >= 3 months, (2) age >= 18 years, and (3) able to walk with or without assistive devices. All participants wore a Fitbit Charge 2 tracker for a minimum of 4 weeks. The primary outcome was the number of steps per day. Each participant completed the Physical Activity Questionnaire, the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ)-9, the PROMIS Short form Fatigue Questionnaire at baseline, and the Participant Technology Experience Questionnaire at day 7 after study enrolment. Findings Of the 52 recruited, 45 participants (urban = 25; rural = 20) completed the study. The mean age was 61 +/- 15 years, 42% were women, 64% were Hispanic, and the mean dialysis vintage was 4.4 +/- 3.0 years. For those with valid Fitbit data (defined as >= 10 hours of wear per day) for 28 days (n = 45), participants walked an average of 3688 steps per day, and 73% of participants were sedentary (<5000 steps/day). Participants aged >80 years were less active than younger (age < 65 years) participants (1232 vs. 4529 steps, P = 0.01). There were no statistical differences between the groups when stratified by gender (women vs. men [2817 vs. 4324 steps, respectively]), urbanicity (rural vs. urban dialysis unit [3141 vs. 4123 steps, respectively]), and dialysis/nondialysis day (3177 vs. 4133 steps, respectively). Due to the small sample size, we also calculated effect sizes. The effect size was medium for the gender differences (cohen's d = 0.57) and small to medium for urbanicity and dialysis/nondialysis day (d = 0.37 and d = 0.33, respectively). We found no association between physical activity and self-reported depression and fatigue scale. The majority of participants (62%, 28/45) found the Fitbit tracker easy to wear and comfortable. Discussion ESKD participants receiving hemodialysis are frequently sedentary, and differences appear more pronounced in older patients. These findings may assist in designing patient-centered interventions to increase physical activity among hemodialysis patients.

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