Abstract

Patients undergoing dialysis through a permanent catheter often experience infection or malfunction. However, few studies have clarified the predictors of permanent catheter patency survival in patients undergoing hemodialysis. We assessed the relationship between the parameters of body composition monitoring (BCM), determined before the initiation of dialysis, and the patency survival of the permanent catheters inserted in 179 patients who commenced hemodialysis between 14 January 2020 and 31 August 2021. The relationships between permanent catheter patency at 6 weeks and BCM parameters, laboratory tests, age, sex, comorbidities, and medications at baseline were studied using Kaplan-Meier survival curves. Permanent catheter patency was observed to be superior at high extracellular-to-intracellular (ECW/ICW) ratio (p < 0.005). After adjustment for covariates, the ECW/ICW ratio remained an independent factor associated with permanent catheter patency survival. When patients with non-patent catheters were subdivided into infection and malfunction groups, and the associations of BCM parameters were evaluated in those groups, the ECW/ICW ratio was not significantly associated with permanent catheter patency survival in the infection group (p = 0.327); instead, a significant association was found for the lean tissue index (p < 0.001). In the malfunction group, the ECW/ICW ratio remained significantly associated with permanent catheter patency survival (p < 0.001).

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