Abstract

BackgroundPatients on home hemodialysis (HHD) exhibit superior survival compared with patients on institutional hemodialysis (IHD) and peritoneal dialysis (PD). There is a sparsity of reports comparing morbidity between HHD and IHD or PD and none in a European population. The aim of this study is to compare morbidity between modalities in a Swedish population.MethodsThe Swedish Renal Registry was used to retrieve patients starting on HHD, IHD or PD. Patients were matched according to sex, age, comorbidity and start date. The Swedish Inpatient Registry was used to determine comorbidity before starting renal replacement therapy (RRT) and hospital admissions during RRT. Dialysis technique survival was compared between HHD and PD.ResultsRRT was initiated with HHD for 152 patients; these were matched with 608 patients with IHD and 456 with PD. Patients with HHD had significantly lower annual admission rate and number of days in hospital. (median 1.7 admissions; 12 days) compared with IHD (2.2; 14) and PD (2.8; 20).The annual admission rate was significantly lower for patients with HHD compared with IHD for cardiovascular diagnoses and compared with PD for infectious disease diagnoses. Dialysis technique survival was significantly longer with HHD compared with PD.ConclusionsPatients choosing HHD as initial RRT spend less time in hospital compared with patients on IHD and PD and they were more likely than PD patients, to remain on their initial modality. These advantages, in combination with better survival and higher likelihood of renal transplantation, are important incentives for promoting the use of HHD.

Highlights

  • Patients on home hemodialysis (HHD) exhibit superior survival compared with patients on institutional hemodialysis (IHD) and peritoneal dialysis (PD)

  • Patient characteristics Between 1991 and 2012 152 patients started HHD as initial renal replacement therapy (RRT) in Sweden, according to the criteria used in this study [12]

  • The cohorts were not matched with respect to renal disease; the most common renal diagnosis was glomerulonephritis in all three groups followed by adult polycystic kidney disease for HHD and diabetic nephropathy for IHD and PD patients (Additional file 1: Table S3)

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Summary

Introduction

Patients on home hemodialysis (HHD) exhibit superior survival compared with patients on institutional hemodialysis (IHD) and peritoneal dialysis (PD). There is a sparsity of reports comparing morbidity between HHD and IHD or PD and none in a European population. The aim of this study is to compare morbidity between modalities in a Swedish population. Most earlier studies have shown better survival for patients on home hemodialysis (HHD), compared with patients on institutional hemodialysis (IHD) or peritoneal dialysis (PD) [4–11]. We corroborated these findings in earlier studies after matching for Frequent and/or long-term hospitalizations severely impact a patient’s ability to live an independent life. Dialysis technique failure is another important concern for patients on home-based dialysis modalities as it can cause temporary or permanent dependence on dialysis personnel with an unwanted switch to institutional hemodialysis.

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