Journal Watch
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Standard vs. Incremental PD Start: 12-year Retrospective Study
When people start PD with some residual function, is it beneficial not to begin with a full PD prescription? A study looked back at 12 years of people who started PD, 232 standard and 71 intermittent (iPD; 2-3 manual exchanges per day). Those who did iPD had higher residual kidney function than those on standard PD. For people with diabetes, iPD was linked with a survival advantage as well.
Read the abstract » | (added 2021-12-16)
Tags: PD, Residual Function, Intermittent PD, IPD, Diabetes
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Better Technique Survival with Assisted PD
A study of 384 PD patients in China compared the outcomes of 274 who did self-care PD with 110 who had assisted PD. Older age, diabetes, low residual kidney function and low serum albumin predicted higher mortality, as did assisted PD, since this group had more comorbidities. Technique failure was also significantly lower in the assisted PD group.
Read the abstract » | (added 2021-04-16)
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Prolonged PD Training Linked with Higher Peritonitis Risk
A single center retrospective analysis of all PD training sessions from 2001 to 2018 (135 patients) found that the 23% whose training lasted longer than 13 sessions had a significantly higher risk of peritonitis, though technique survival was not reduced. Factors associated with prolonged PD training included older age, diabetes, and unemployment.
Read the abstract » | (added 2020-12-10)
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Universal AVF Back-up for PD Patients Reduces HD Catheter Use
Should an arteriovenous fistula always be placed as a PD back-up for new patients? A retrospective study of two hospitals examined this question. Hospital RAH (n=142) did universal AVF back-up at PD start. Hospital PAH (n=232) did selective AVF back-up for “high risk” patients only. Yet, the transfer-to-HD rate at RAH was about half that of RAH (23% vs. 43%)—as was the HD catheter usage rate (33% vs. 65%; p<0.001), despite a population at RAH that was more likely to be older, Caucasian, and have diabetes.
Read the abstract » | (added 2020-05-12)
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Outcomes Between Urgent-start PD and HD
Urgent-start PD (n=93) and urgent-start HD (n=91) patients similar in age, diabetes and other comorbidities, and lab values, were followed for 6 months to 2 years. Rates of mechanical complications, bacteremia, and survival were comparable. Exit site/access infections were significantly higher in the PD patients, but those on PD had significantly better residual kidney function and phosphorus control, and used significantly less erythropoietin and antihypertensives
Read the abstract » | (added 2020-04-13)
Tags: Haemodialysis, Renal Function Recovery, Peritoneal Dialysis, Urgent Start
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Comorbidities—but not Peritonitis—drove Mortality on PD
Among 242 Turkish PD patients followed for up to 9 years, age over 65, diabetes, cancer, and heart failure were independent risk factors for death, but surprisingly peritonitis was not.
Read the abstract » | (added 2020-02-19)
Tags: Peritoneal Dialysis, Mortality, Patient Survival, Peritonitis, Technique Survival
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Diabetes and the Risk of Peritonitis on PD
In contrast to earlier reports, a single-center study of PD patients between 1980 and 2012 (by era: 1980-’93, 1994-’04, 2005-12) found that while PD-associated peritonitis was higher among patients with diabetes in the earlier two eras, there were no differences in recent years.
Read the abstract » | (added 2020-01-09)
Tags: PD, Peritonitis, Diabetes
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Is PD a Good Option for Patients with Liver Cirrhosis?
A study matched patients with cirrhosis who did PD, patients with cirrhosis who did HD, and non-cirrhosis patients on PD by age, sex, catheter placement date, and diabetes status. PD technique failure and all-cause mortality were similar between patients with and without cirrhosis.
Read the abstract » | (added 2019-10-14)
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Sudden Cardiac Death (SCD) in PD vs. HD
A Korean registry analysis of 132,083 dialysis patients between 1985 and 2017 found that SCD caused 19.6% of the 34,632 deaths. Even after adjusting for age and significant comorbidities, HD was independently associated with SCD, as was diabetes.
Read the abstract » | (added 2019-10-14)
Tags: SCD, Sudden Cardiac Death, PD, HD
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Glycated Albumin vs. HbA1c Predicts Mortality in PD Patients with Diabetes
In patients on hemodialysis, glycated albumin (GA) reflects glycemic control and predicts all-cause mortality. A new retrospective, longitudinal observational study looked at GA in PD. Among 44 PD patients with diabetes matched to 88 HD patients with diabetes followed for 3 years, GA was a more precise way to measure glycemic control than hemoglobin A1c.
Read the abstract » | (added 2019-09-11)
Tags: Peritoneal Dialysis, All cause Mortality, Glycaemic Control, Glycated Albumin, Glycated Haemoglobin

