Journal Watch
Patients Prefer Home Therapies
Researchers from New Zealand asked 143 CKD patients expected to need dialysis within a year about their preferences. Patients significantly preferred home treatments, due to flexible schedule, better well-being, and longer survival—and were even willing to pay as much as $400 per month out-of-pocket for extra nursing support. Read the abstract.
Read the abstract » | (added 2017-11-13)
Tags: Confidence Intervals, Health Expenditures, Humans, Life Expectancy, Odds Ratio, Patient Preference, Adult, Choice Behavior
Urgent-start PD in Brazil
In a prospective study, 51 patients who needed dialysis urgently began peritoneal dialysis instead of hemodialysis. Even with high-volume dialysate used less than 72 hours after catheter placement (on alternate days in the dialysis clinic), the option was feasible and safe. Read the abstract.
Read the abstract » | (added 2017-11-13)
Tags: Acute Peritoneal Dialysis, Unplanned Peritoneal Dialysis, Urgent start Dialysis, Urgent start Peritoneal Dialysis
Nocturnal Home HD Boosts Patient Employment Compared to PD
A year-long study comparing 20 alternate-night nocturnal home hemodialysis patients to matched 81 CAPD patients in Hong Kong found 80% employment among the nocturnal HD patients (who were 5 years younger) and just 33.3% among PD patients. The nocturnal patients also used fewer phosphate binders. Read the abstract.
Read the abstract » | (added 2017-11-13)
Tags: Chinese, Nocturnal Hemodialysis, Employment Rate, Incident, Peritoneal Dialysis
Remote Monitoring in PD May Catch Problems Early and Reduce Costs
A simulation study using 12 patient profiles has determined that the ability to obtain clinical treatment information from PD could avoid the use of home and ER visits and hospital stays by identifying problems early, saving an estimated $7,088 to $23,364 across Italy, Germany, and the U.S. Read the abstract.
Read the abstract » | (added 2017-11-13)
Tags: Chronic Kidney Disease, Economics, End stage Renal Disease, Peritoneal Dialysis, Remote Therapy Management, Telemedicine
Which PD Exit Site Dressing is Better?
Is an occlusive dressing better to reduce exit site or tunnel infections? A semi-occlusive one? It made no difference, found a new analysis of 2,460 incident PD patients. Read the abstract.
Read the abstract » | (added 2017-11-13)
Tags: Chronic Kidney Disease, Dressing, Nursing, Peritoneal Dialysis
The Impact of AGEs on the Gut Microbiome in PD
The Impact of AGEs on the Gut Microbiome in PD Advanced glycation endpoints (AGEs) cause inflammation and are linked with heart disease. A new PLoS One paper reports on a pilot trial of 20 PD patients who routinely ate a high-AGE diet. Ten were randomized to eat as usual, while 10 had their meals AGE-restricted for a month. Gut bacteria analysis found major shifts in the experimental group that could have clinical importance.
Read the abstract » | (added 2017-10-13)
Tags: Education Issues: For Patients And Professionals, Fistulas, Grafts And Catheters (including PD)
More CMS Incentives Needed to Boost Home Dialysis
More CMS Incentives Needed to Boost Home Dialysis Have changes in the ESRD Prospective Payment System (“bundle”) designed to increase the use of home dialysis been successful? A new analysis of USRDS data from 2006 to 2013 found that bundling injectable medications and paying for home training did move the needle a bit—but not enough. Compared to patients with other insurance who had a 4.1% increase in home dialysis during this period, Medicare beneficiaries had a non-significant 5.8% rise.
Read the abstract » | (added 2017-10-13)
Tags: Education Issues: For Patients And Professionals, Choosing The Right Path Through ‘The System’
Views of Patients vs. MDs Re: Important Dialysis Outcomes
An international 3-round Delphi survey that started with 202 patients and care partners and 979 renal professionals aimed to generate a consensus-based prioritized list of core outcomes for HD trials. Not surprisingly, patient/care partner priorities differed dramatically from those of professionals: patients largely valued quality of life outcomes, while professionals focused on clinical ones.
Read the abstract » | (added 2017-10-13)
Tags: What Is The Best Dialysis Option For Me, Making Dialysis Better
Obesity and PD Catheter Function
It is a common belief that obesity is a contraindication to PD—but a new study of 231 patients who were demographically similar except for weight found otherwise. Compared to normal weight patients, those who were overweight or obese had no signficant differences in catheter dysfunction or complications—regardless of the placement technique used.
Read the abstract » | (added 2017-10-12)
Tags: Education Issues: For Patients And Professionals, Fistulas, Grafts And Catheters (including PD)
Why Do Patients Think PD is Underused?
A survey of 920 HD patients in Saudi Arabia found that lack of appropriate counseling and education by nephrologists was an important reason why they did not choose PD.
Read the abstract » | (added 2017-10-12)