Urgent-start peritoneal dialysis: Association with outcomes

Author:

Karpinski Steph12ORCID,Sibbel Scott12,Cohen Dena E12ORCID,Colson Carey12,Van Wyck David B2,Ghaffari Arshia3,Schreiber Martin J24,Brunelli Steven M.12,Tentori Francesca12

Affiliation:

1. DaVita Clinical Research, Minneapolis, MN, USA

2. DaVita Institute for Patient Safety, Denver, CO, USA

3. Kidney Center, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA

4. DaVita Inc., Denver, CO, USA

Abstract

The majority of end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) patients start dialysis without adequate pre-dialysis planning. Of these patients, the vast majority initiate in-centre haemodialysis using a central venous catheter (ICHD-CVC). A minority utilise urgent-start peritoneal dialysis (USPD), whereby a peritoneal dialysis catheter is placed and used for dialysis without the usual 2–4-week waiting period. In this multicentre, retrospective study of adult patients initiating dialysis during 2018, we compared outcomes among patients utilising these two dialysis initiation routes. Patients who initiated dialysis via ICHD-CVC were matched 1:1 to patients who utilised USPD on the basis of aetiology of ESKD, race, diabetes status and insurance type. Hospitalisation and mortality were evaluated from dialysis initiation through the first of death, transplant, loss to follow-up or study end (30 June 2019). Outcomes were compared using models adjusted for age and sex. A total of 717 USPD patients were matched to ICHD-CVC patients. During follow-up, USPD patients were hospitalised at a rate of 1.21 admissions/patient-year (pt-yr) versus 1.51 admissions/pt-yr for ICHD-CVC. This corresponded to a 24% lower rate of hospitalisation among USPD patients (adjusted incidence rate ratio 0.76, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.65–0.88). Mortality rates were 0.08 and 0.11 deaths/pt-yr among USPD patients and ICHD-CVC patients, respectively (adjusted hazard ratio 0.84, 95% CI 0.62, 1.15). These findings suggest that more widespread adoption of USPD may be beneficial among patients with limited pre-dialysis planning.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Nephrology,General Medicine

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