Abstract
Background and AimsAlthough a number of studies have been published on peritoneal protein clearance (PrCl) and its association with patient outcomes, the results have been inconsistent. Therefore, the intent of this study was to evaluate the impact of PrCl on cardiovascular disease (CVD) and mortality in peritoneal dialysis (PD) patients.MethodsThis prospective observational study included a total of 540 incident patients who started PD at NHIC Ilsan Hospital, Korea from January 2000 to December 2009. Two different types of analyses such as intention-to-treat and as-treated were used.ResultsCorrelation analyses revealed that PrCl was positively correlated with diabetes, pulse pressure, C–reactive protein (CRP) level, dialysate/plasma creatinine ratio (D/P cr) at 4 h, and peritoneal Kt/V urea. PrCl was inversely correlated with serum albumin and triglyceride levels. On multivariate analysis, serum albumin, pulse pressure, D/P cr at 4 h, and peritoneal Kt/V urea were found to be independent determinants of PrCl. A total of 129 (23.9%) patients in intention-to-treat analysis and 117 (21.7%) patients in as-treated analysis developed new cardiovascular events. Time to occurrence of cardiovascular event was significantly longer in patients with a value of PrCl below the median (89.4 ml/day). In multivariate analysis, older age, presence of diabetes or previous CVD, and higher PrCl were independent predictors of cardiovascular events. Patients above the median value of PrCl had a significantly lower rate of survival than those below the median. However, a higher PrCl was not associated with increased mortality in multivariate Cox analysis.ConclusionsA higher PrCl is a risk for occurrence of cardiovascular event, but not mortality in PD patients. Large randomized clinical trials are warranted to confirm this finding.
Highlights
Peritoneal dialysis (PD) is an established treatment modality in end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients and approximately 150000 patients are being maintained on peritoneal dialysis (PD) worldwide [1]
Prevalence of cardiovascular disease (CVD), and residual renal function (RRF) were not different between the groups when patients were divided into two groups based on the median levels of baseline protein clearance (PrCl)
Age (60.4613.5 versus 57.8614.4 years, P = 0.026), prevalence of diabetes (58.8 versus 47.8%, P = 0.01), serum log10CRP level (20.7960.79 versus 20.9560.71 mg/dL, P = 0.022), dialysate/plasma creatinine ratio (D/P cr) at 4 h (0.7260.18 versus 0.6460.16, P,0.001), and peritoneal Kt/V (1.560.6 versus 1.460.5, P = 0.044) were significantly higher, while serum triglyceride (137.3685.5 versus 163.9695.2 mg/dL, P = 0.001) and albumin levels (2.960.5 versus 3.460.5 g/dL, P,0.001), and normalized protein catabolic rate (nPCR) (0.9560.24 versus 1.0160.27 g/Kg/day, P = 0.004) were significantly lower in the high PrCl group compared to the low PrCl group
Summary
Peritoneal dialysis (PD) is an established treatment modality in end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients and approximately 150000 patients are being maintained on PD worldwide [1]. There have been significant improvements in patient outcomes due to advances such as the optimization of the adequacy of dialysis, management of blood pressure and anemia, and the maintenance of biochemical parameters within the target range. Their morbidities and mortality have been much higher than those of the general population. Chronic inflammation and malnutrition are risk factors related to ESRD patients on chronic PD which play a pivotal role in the development of CVD in these patients [4]. The intent of this study was to evaluate the impact of PrCl on cardiovascular disease (CVD) and mortality in peritoneal dialysis (PD) patients
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