Pleural effusion portends a poor prognosis in patients on continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis

Pleural effusion is not an infrequent complication in patients undergoing continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis. However, there is not adequate data to evaluate pleural effusion and prognosis in clinical practice. In this study, we validated this potential association by a multicenter cohort. We...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2024-01, Vol.19 (1), p.e0297343-e0297343
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Fengping, Xiang, Ting, Feng, Xiaoran, Zhang, Guilin, Liu, Yu, Li, Luohua
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Xiang, Ting
Feng, Xiaoran
Zhang, Guilin
Liu, Yu
Li, Luohua
description Pleural effusion is not an infrequent complication in patients undergoing continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis. However, there is not adequate data to evaluate pleural effusion and prognosis in clinical practice. In this study, we validated this potential association by a multicenter cohort. We screened 1,162 patients who met the inclusion criteria with PD. According to the existence of pleural effusion on stable dialysis (4-8 weeks after dialysis initiation), the participants were divided into pleural effusion and non-pleural effusion groups. The hazard ratios (HRs) of all-cause and cause-specific death were estimated with adjustment for demographic characteristics and multiple potential clinical confounders. Subgroup analysis and propensity score matching (PSM) were used to further verify the robustness of the correlation between hydrothorax and prognosis. Pleural effusion was found in 8.9% (104/1162) of PD individuals. After adjusting for the confounding factors, patients with pleural effusion had significantly increased HRs for all-cause death was 3.06 (2.36-3.96) and cardiovascular death was 3.78 (2.67-5.35) compared to those without pleural effusion. However, it was not associated with infectious and other causes of death. After PSM, the HR of all-cause mortality was 3.56 (2.28-5.56). The association trends were consistent in the subgroup sensitivity analysis. Pleural effusion is not rare in PD, and is significantly associated with overall and cardiovascular mortality, which is independent of underlying diseases and clinically relevant indicators.
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However, there is not adequate data to evaluate pleural effusion and prognosis in clinical practice. In this study, we validated this potential association by a multicenter cohort. We screened 1,162 patients who met the inclusion criteria with PD. According to the existence of pleural effusion on stable dialysis (4-8 weeks after dialysis initiation), the participants were divided into pleural effusion and non-pleural effusion groups. The hazard ratios (HRs) of all-cause and cause-specific death were estimated with adjustment for demographic characteristics and multiple potential clinical confounders. Subgroup analysis and propensity score matching (PSM) were used to further verify the robustness of the correlation between hydrothorax and prognosis. Pleural effusion was found in 8.9% (104/1162) of PD individuals. After adjusting for the confounding factors, patients with pleural effusion had significantly increased HRs for all-cause death was 3.06 (2.36-3.96) and cardiovascular death was 3.78 (2.67-5.35) compared to those without pleural effusion. However, it was not associated with infectious and other causes of death. After PSM, the HR of all-cause mortality was 3.56 (2.28-5.56). The association trends were consistent in the subgroup sensitivity analysis. 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However, there is not adequate data to evaluate pleural effusion and prognosis in clinical practice. In this study, we validated this potential association by a multicenter cohort. We screened 1,162 patients who met the inclusion criteria with PD. According to the existence of pleural effusion on stable dialysis (4-8 weeks after dialysis initiation), the participants were divided into pleural effusion and non-pleural effusion groups. The hazard ratios (HRs) of all-cause and cause-specific death were estimated with adjustment for demographic characteristics and multiple potential clinical confounders. Subgroup analysis and propensity score matching (PSM) were used to further verify the robustness of the correlation between hydrothorax and prognosis. Pleural effusion was found in 8.9% (104/1162) of PD individuals. 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subjects Body mass index
Cardiovascular disease
Cardiovascular diseases
Care and treatment
Chronic kidney failure
Complications and side effects
Continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis
Death
Development and progression
Dialysis
Health aspects
Medical prognosis
Mortality
Peritoneal dialysis
Peritoneum
Pleural effusion
Pleural effusions
Prevention
Prognosis
Proteins
Quality of life
Risk factors
Sensitivity analysis
Subgroups
title Pleural effusion portends a poor prognosis in patients on continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis
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