Quality Assurance Audit of Technique Failure and 90-Day Mortality after Program Discharge in a Canadian Home Hemodialysis Program

Little is known about patients exiting home hemodialysis. We sought to characterize the reasons, clinical characteristics, and pre-exit health care team interactions of patients on home hemodialysis who died or underwent modality conversion (negative disposition) compared with prevalent patients and...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical journal of the American Society of Nephrology 2017-08, Vol.12 (8), p.1259-1264
Hauptverfasser: Shah, Nikhil, Reintjes, Frances, Courtney, Mark, Klarenbach, Scott W, Ye, Feng, Schick-Makaroff, Kara, Jindal, Kailash, Pauly, Robert P
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Little is known about patients exiting home hemodialysis. We sought to characterize the reasons, clinical characteristics, and pre-exit health care team interactions of patients on home hemodialysis who died or underwent modality conversion (negative disposition) compared with prevalent patients and those who were transplanted (positive disposition). We conducted an audit of all consecutive patients incident to home hemodialysis from January of 2010 to December of 2014 as part of ongoing quality assurance. Records were reviewed for the 6 months before exit, and vital statistics were assessed up to 90 days postexit. Ninety-four patients completed training; 25 (27%) received a transplant, 11 (12%) died, and 23 (25%) were transferred to in-center hemodialysis. Compared with the positive disposition group, patients in the negative disposition group had a longer mean dialysis vintage (3.15 [SD=4.98] versus 1.06 [SD=1.16] years; =0.003) and were performing conventional versus a more intensive hemodialysis prescription (23 of 34 versus 23 of 60;
ISSN:1555-9041
1555-905X
DOI:10.2215/CJN.00140117