Peritoneal Dialysis Access Revision in Children: Causes, Interventions, and Outcomes

Little published information is available about access failure in children undergoing chronic peritoneal dialysis. Our objectives were to evaluate frequency, risk factors, interventions, and outcome of peritoneal dialysis access revision. Data were derived from 824 incident and 1629 prevalent patien...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical journal of the American Society of Nephrology 2017-01, Vol.12 (1), p.105-112
Hauptverfasser: Borzych-Duzalka, Dagmara, Aki, T Fazil, Azocar, Marta, White, Colin, Harvey, Elizabeth, Mir, Sevgi, Adragna, Marta, Serdaroglu, Erkin, Sinha, Rajiv, Samaille, Charlotte, Vanegas, Juan Jose, Kari, Jameela, Barbosa, Lorena, Bagga, Arvind, Galanti, Monica, Yavascan, Onder, Leozappa, Giovanna, Szczepanska, Maria, Vondrak, Karel, Tse, Kei-Chiu, Schaefer, Franz, Warady, Bradley A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Little published information is available about access failure in children undergoing chronic peritoneal dialysis. Our objectives were to evaluate frequency, risk factors, interventions, and outcome of peritoneal dialysis access revision. Data were derived from 824 incident and 1629 prevalent patients from 105 pediatric nephrology centers enrolled in the International Pediatric Peritoneal Dialysis Network Registry between 2007 and 2015. In total, 452 access revisions were recorded in 321 (13%) of 2453 patients over 3134 patient-years of follow-up, resulting in an overall access revision rate of 0.14 per treatment year. Among 824 incident patients, 186 (22.6%) underwent 188 access revisions over 1066 patient-years, yielding an access revision rate of 0.17 per treatment year; 83% of access revisions in incident patients were reported within the first year of peritoneal dialysis treatment. Catheter survival rates in incident patients were 84%, 80%, 77%, and 73% at 12, 24, 36, and 48 months, respectively. By multivariate logistic regression analysis, risk of access revision was associated with younger age (odds ratio, 0.93; 95% confidence interval, 0.92 to 0.95; P
ISSN:1555-9041
1555-905X
DOI:10.2215/CJN.05270516