Sunday, May 5, 2024
News

Some kidney patients may benefit most from quick dialysis: Study

   SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend    Print this Page   COMMENT

Washington | September 29, 2023 12:13:23 AM IST
According to a study, patients with acute kidney damage who need outpatient dialysis after leaving the hospital receive the same care as patients with the more prevalent end-stage kidney disease.

However, some patients on dialysis for acute kidney injury have the potential to recover. Patients with the latter diagnosis, which is typically brought on by long-standing hypertension or diabetes, must remain on lifelong dialysis or receive a new kidney.

The study was published in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology.

For those who have the potential to recover, remaining on dialysis may place them at unnecessary risk for heart disease, infection, organ damage and death, said first authorIan E. McCoy, MD, of theUCSF Division of Nephrology.

Less than a quarter of patients in a typical midsize dialysis centre have acute kidney injury. It may result from acute infection or shock, causing reduced blood flow to the kidneys, as well as major surgeries and chemotherapy agents that are toxic to the kidneys.

In the study, researchers tracked data from 1,754 patients with acute kidney injury and 6,197 patients with end-stage kidney disease at outpatient dialysis centres. Although lab tests suggested acute kidney injury patients needed less dialysis, the two groups were treated largely the same. Both were started on thrice-weekly dialysis, and the large majority of patients in both groups were not tested for kidney functioning in the first month of treatment.

Among the acute kidney injury patients, 10% died during the three-month study period most likely from the conditions that prompted dialysis, according to the researchers. Of the 41% of patients who recovered kidney function, approximately three-quarters had discontinued dialysis without any changes to the dose, frequency and duration. This suggests that these patients could have been weaned at an earlier point, the researchers noted.

More research is needed on safe weaning strategies, said McCoy. If a patient is weaned off too quickly, they could become short of breath, or they could develop c that can increase the risk of dangerous heart rhythms.

On the other hand, continuing dialysis unnecessarily is also risky, since patients experience high rates of heart disease, infection and mortality, he said.

For kidney specialists taking care of acute kidney injury patients and dialysis providers operating the outpatient centres, there are powerful disincentives to wean patients off dialysis, McCoy said. Deprescribing benefits the health care system, but not the dialysis provider, who will have an empty chair that is not easy to fill. At the same time, kidney specialists lose a multidisciplinary support team of nurses, dieticians and social workers when a patient recovers enough to discontinue dialysis.

Kidney specialists are also paid less by insurance for non-dialysis care even though managing a patient with borderline kidney function is more time-consuming and riskier than managing them on thrice-weekly dialysis. For these reasons, the default path of least resistance may be to continue dialysis.

Approximately half of the patients neither died nor discontinued dialysis by the end of the study. For them, the future looked uncertain, saidChi-yuan Hsu, MD, senior author and chief of the UCSF Division of Nephrology. After about three months of dialysis, they almost always are treated like they will remain on dialysis indefinitely, he said.

Doctors dont seem to pay as much attention as they can to monitoring for early, subtle signs of recovery. When someones kidney function is at 30%, its obvious that they do not need dialysis, but when its subtle, it requires skill, attention, careful discussion with the patient and willingness to assume some risk in the weaning process, said Hsu. We suspect many doctors stop dialysis only when the signs are blindingly obvious.

The worst-case scenario is a patient who may have recovered just enough kidney function to wean but has remained on dialysis. Drops in blood pressure with repeated dialysis may further inflict damage to the vulnerable kidneys driving kidney function below the threshold believed to be required for weaning, said McCoy.

The patient may now be facing dialysis for the rest of their life or end up needing a transplant, if they are well enough to be a candidate. (ANI)

 
  LATEST COMMENTS (0)
POST YOUR COMMENT
Comments Not Available
 
POST YOUR COMMENT
 
 
TRENDING TOPICS
 
 
CITY NEWS
MORE CITIES
 
 
 
MORE HEALTH NEWS
Researchers give more insight into hip o...
Experts developing immune-enhancing ther...
Researchers find how low intensity exerc...
Researchers find new treatment path for ...
Researchers discover new metric for diag...
Do you know immunotherapy post-surgery i...
More...
 
INDIA WORLD ASIA
Haryana CBI Court sentences 4 accused to...
'Kesar' Mango: Spreading Gujarati sweetn...
'Country facing unemployment, inflation ...
'Congress giving benefit of old pension ...
TN Governor RN Ravi, his wife, offer pra...
J-K Police attaches property of drug ped...
More...    
 
 Top Stories
Anushka Sharma makes first public a... 
IPL 2024: RCB skipper Faf Du Plessi... 
UAE: Sharjah Consultative Council c... 
"People will give a befitting reply... 
"Prevention of forest fires our top... 
"1.5 lakh youth who completed Army ... 
UN demands better protection for jo... 
"We tried hard with bouncers....": ...