First hemodialysis access selection varies with patient acuity

Timely placement of a reliable permanent vascular access is essential for hemodialysis care quality; National Kidney Foundation Dialysis Outcomes Quality Improvement (NKF-DOQI) guidelines emphasize native arterio-venous (AV) fistulae as preferred access for incident patients. As part of Network One&...

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Veröffentlicht in:Advances in renal replacement therapy 2000-10, Vol.7 (4 Suppl 1), p.S4-10
Hauptverfasser: Friedman, A L, Walworth, C, Meehan, C, Wander, H, Shemin, D, DeSoi, W, Kitsen, J, Hill, C, Lambert, C, Mesler, D
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Timely placement of a reliable permanent vascular access is essential for hemodialysis care quality; National Kidney Foundation Dialysis Outcomes Quality Improvement (NKF-DOQI) guidelines emphasize native arterio-venous (AV) fistulae as preferred access for incident patients. As part of Network One's Vascular Access Quality Improvement Project (QIP) we investigated whether patients' course to end-stage renal disease (ESRD) influenced vascular access selection. Baseline information was obtained for incident (1998) dialysis patients from 6 centers participating in the Network QIP. Patients were subdivided into 3 predefined clinical groups: KNOWN (known chronic renal disease, seen by a nephrologist, with predictable progression to ESRD), CRISIS (KNOWN but with unanticipated medical crisis precipitating ESRD), and UNKNOWN (not known to have chronic renal insufficiency or never seen by a nephrologist before developing ESRD). Two hundred forty patients were identified (median age 69.9, 42% diabetic). Only 43% of the entire population experienced an orderly progression to renal insufficiency. The most frequent initial access was a catheter (54%), followed by a fistula (29%) and a graft (16%), but selection of initial access differed significantly by patient group, with 46% of KNOWN patients receiving a fistula (P
ISSN:1073-4449