4.0 Article

Sustainability of peritoneal dialysis and renal function with proactive combination therapy

Journal

JOURNAL OF ARTIFICIAL ORGANS
Volume 26, Issue 4, Pages 335-339

Publisher

SPRINGER JAPAN KK
DOI: 10.1007/s10047-022-01375-8

Keywords

Peritoneal dialysis; Hemodialysis; Residual renal function

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study investigated the effects of proactive combination dialysis therapy on peritoneal dialysis and residual renal function. The observation results showed that patients who started with proactive combination therapy had better technical survival of peritoneal dialysis and improved urinary volume and creatinine clearance as residual renal function compared to patients who received peritoneal monotherapy.
Most combined peritoneal dialysis and hemodialysis therapies are used to compensate for the lack of dialysis volume and efficiency in pre-started peritoneal dialysis patients. The aim was to determine the effects on both peritoneal dialysis and residual renal function when proactively combined therapy is started at dialysis induction. This report was based on observation of 10 patients who initiated dialysis therapy with a combination of peritoneal and hemodialysis at induction, and the control group consisted of 24 patients with peritoneal monotherapy in a single dialysis center. The technical survival of peritoneal dialysis therapy and urinary volume and creatinine clearance as residual renal function were assessed. Technical survival of peritoneal dialysis during the 5-year observation period was much better in patients who started with proactive combination therapy than with peritoneal dialysis monotherapy. Between induction and 24 months later, median urinary volume (interquartile value) changed from 1500 (1100-1583) to 800 (545-1875) mL/day and from 1600 (1300-2150) to 1480 (115-1885) mL/day for peritoneal alone and for combination therapy, respectively. Creatinine clearance values changed from 7.0 (6.0-8.7) to 2.0 (1.0-3.0) mL/min for peritoneal alone and from 6.0 (4.0-7.3) to 3.0 (0.5-4.0) mL/min for combination therapy. Though some possible confounding factors, including selection bias, cannot be ruled out, this investigation suggests the benefit of proactive combination dialysis therapy on the sustainability of peritoneal dialysis and residual renal function.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.0
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available