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Superior Patient Survival for Continuous Ambulatory Peritoneal Dialysis Patients Treated with a Peritoneal Dialysis Fluid with Neutral pH and Low Glucose Degradation Product Concentration (Balance)

Authors :
Hyun Yong Song
Hyeong Cheon Park
Jun Young Do
Sug Kyun Shin
Ho Yung Lee
Yeong Hoon Kim
Sung Ro Yun
Yong-Lim Kim
Curie Ahn
Moon-Jae Kim
Dae Joong Kim
Bo Jeung Seo
Yong Soo Kim
Source :
Peritoneal Dialysis International: Journal of the International Society for Peritoneal Dialysis. 25:248-255
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2005.

Abstract

Background In recent years, laboratory and clinical research has suggested the need for peritoneal dialysis fluids (PDFs) that are more biocompatible than the conventional PDFs commonly used today. Bioincompatibility of PDF has been attributed to low pH, lactate, glucose, glucose degradation products (GDPs), and osmolality. PDFs with neutral pH and low GDPs are now available commercially. In vitro and early clinical studies suggest that these solutions are indeed more biocompatible but, as of now, there is no evidence that their use improves patient outcome. Methods Using a dedicated database of over 2000 patients treated with PD in Korea, we were able to conduct a retrospective observational study comparing outcomes for incident continuous ambulatory PD patients treated with a standard, conventional, heat-sterilized PDF to the outcomes for patients treated with a novel, low GDP, neutral-pH PDF prepared in a dual-compartment, double-bag PD system (Balance; Fresenius Medical Care, St. Wendel, Germany). In an intention-to-treat analysis, patient and technique survival, peritonitis-free survival, and peritonitis rates were compared in 611 patients treated with Balance for up to 30 months and 551 patients with a standard PDF (stay·safe; Fresenius Medical Care) treated in the same era and with equivalent follow-up. Results The patients were well matched for most relevant characteristics except older age distribution for the patients treated with the standard PDF. Patients treated with Balance had significantly superior survival compared to those treated with the standard PDF (74% vs 62% at 28 months, p = 0.0032). In a multivariate Cox regression model including age, diabetes, and gender, the survival advantage persisted (relative risk of death for Balance 0.75, 95% confidence interval 0.56 – 0.99, p = 0.0465). Modality technique survival was similar in Kaplan–Meier analysis for both PDFs. No differences were detected in peritonitis-free survival or in peritonitis rates between the two solutions. Conclusion This study, for the first time, suggests that treatment with a novel biocompatible PDF with low GDP concentration and neutral pH confers a significant survival advantage. The exact mechanisms for such a survival advantage cannot be determined from this study. The usual criticisms of observational studies apply and the results reported here strongly warrant the undertaking of appropriately designed, randomized, controlled clinical trials.

Details

ISSN :
17184304 and 08968608
Volume :
25
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Peritoneal Dialysis International: Journal of the International Society for Peritoneal Dialysis
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....62d4005c4a2bb78da23370746c2df8d8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/089686080502500308