Abstract

BackgroundThe Japanese Society for Dialysis Therapy (JSDT) published in 2013 inaugural hemodialysis (HD) guidelines. Specific targets include 1.4 for single-pool Kt/V (spKt/V) with a minimum dose of 1.2, minimum dialysis session length of 4 hours, minimum blood flow rate (BFR) of 200 mL/min, fluid removal rate no more than 15 mL/kg/hr, and hemodiafiltration (HDF) therapy for certain identified symptoms. We evaluated the effect of these guidelines on actual practice in the years spanning 2005 – 2018.MethodsAnalyses were carried out to describe trends in the above HD prescription practices from December 2005 to April 2013 (before guideline publication) to August 2018 based on prevalent patient cross-sections from approximately 60 randomly selected HD facilities participating in the Japan Dialysis Outcomes and Practice Patterns Study.ResultsFrom April 2006 to August 2017 continual rises occurred in mean spKt/V (from 1.35 to 1.49), and percent of patients having spKt/V>1.2 (71% to 85%). Mean BFR increased with time from 198.3 mL/min (April 2006) to 218.4 mL/min (August 2017) , along with percent of patients with BFR >200 ml/min (65% to 85%). HDF use increased slightly from 6% (April 2006 and August 2009) to 8% by April 2013, but increased greatly thereafter to 23% by August 2017. In contrast, mean HD treatment time showed little change from 2006-2017, whereas mean UFR declined from 11.3 in 2006 to 8.4 mL/Kg/hour in 2017.ConclusionsFrom 2006 – 2018 Japanese HD patients experienced marked improvement in reaching the spKt/V target specified by the 2013 JSDT guidelines. This may have been due to moderate increase in mean BFR even though mean HD session length did not change much. In addition, HDF use increased dramatically in this time period. Other HD delivery changes during this time, such as increased use of super high flux dialyzers, also merit study. While we cannot definitively conclude a causal relationship between the publication of the guidelines and the subsequent practice changes in Japan, those changes moved practice closer to the recommendations of the guidelines.

Highlights

  • The Japanese Society for Dialysis Therapy (JSDT) published in 2013 inaugural hemodialysis (HD) guidelines

  • We investigated the impact of the 2013 Japanese Society for Dialysis Therapy Clinical Guideline for “Maintenance Hemodialysis: Hemodialysis Prescriptions” on hemodialysis prescription in Japan using the data of the Japan-Dialysis Outcomes and Practice Patterns Study (DOPPS) from 2005–2018 (DOPPS phase 3, 4, 5, and 6)

  • The mean single-pool Kt/V (spKt/V) increased with time, from 1.35 (April 2006) to 1.40 (August 2009) and to 1.42 (April 2013), even before publication of the Guidelines

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Summary

Introduction

The Japanese Society for Dialysis Therapy (JSDT) published in 2013 inaugural hemodialysis (HD) guidelines. Tomo et al BMC Nephrol (2021) 22:339 showed that higher dialysis dose and longer dialysis treatment time were associated with lower mortality rates These studies confirmed that survival of HD patients is greatly influenced by dialysis prescription [2,3,4,5]. Based on these findings, the Kidney Disease Outcomes Quality Initiative (KDOQI) guidelines for hemodialysis adequacy were developed and recommended that single pool Kt/V should be 1.2 or higher (excluding residual kidney function), as a measure of dialysis dose for thrice weekly HD [6].

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