Intensive renal support in critically ill patients with acute kidney injury did not decrease mortality, improve recovery of kidney function, or reduce the rate of nonrenal organ failure as compared with less-intensive therapy involving a defined dose of intermittent hemodialysis three times per week and continuous renal-replacement therapy at 20 ml per kilogram per hour. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00076219.)
The Nijmegen Biomedical Study is a population-based cross-sectional study conducted in the eastern part of the Netherlands. As part of the overall study, we provide reference values of estimated glomerular filtration rate (GFR) for this Caucasian population without expressed risk. Age-stratified, randomly selected inhabitants received a postal questionnaire on lifestyle and medical history. In a large subset of the responders, serum creatinine was measured. The GFR was then measured using the abbreviated Modification of Diet in Renal Disease (MDRD) formula. To limit possible bias, serum creatinine was calibrated against measurements performed in the original MDRD laboratory. The study cohort included 2823 male and 3274 female Caucasian persons aged 18-90 years. A reference population of apparently healthy subjects was selected by excluding persons with known hypertension, diabetes, cardiovascular-or renal diseases. This healthy study cohort included 1660 male subjects and 2072 female subjects, of which 869 of both genders were 65 years or older. The median GFR was 85 ml/min/1.73 m 2 in 30-to 34-year-old men and 83 ml/min/1.73 m 2 in similar aged women. In these healthy persons, GFR declined approximately 0.4 ml/min/year. Our study provides age-and gender-specific reference values of GFR in a population of Caucasian persons without identifiable risk.
The impact of dialysis modality on infection, especially early in the course of dialysis, has not been well studied. This study compared infection between hemodialysis (HD) and peritoneal dialysis (PD) from the start of dialysis and evaluated factors that have an impact on infection risk. In this observational cohort study, all incident dialysis patients (n ؍ 181; HD 119 and PD 62) at a single center from 1999 to 2005 had data collected prospectively beginning day 1 of dialysis. Excluded were those with any previous ESRD therapy. Infection rates were evaluated using multivariate Poisson regression. Overall infection rates were similar (HD 0.77 versus PD 0.86/yr; P ؍ 0.24). Only HD patients had bacteremia (0.16/yr), and only PD patients had peritonitis (0.24/yr). Bacteremia that occurred <90 d after start of HD was 0.44/yr, increased compared with overall rate of 0.16/yr (P < 0.004). HD catheters, used in 67% of patients who started HD, were associated with a strikingly increased rate of bacteremia. Peritonitis <90 d was 0.22/yr, no different from the overall rate. Modality was not an independent predictor of overall infections (PD versus HD: relative risk 1.30; 95% confidence interval 0.93 to 1.8; P ؍ 0.12) using multivariate analysis. PD and HD patients had similar infection rates overall, but type of infection and risk over time varied. HD patients had an especially high risk for bacteremia in the first 90 d, whereas the risk for peritonitis for the PD cohort was not different over time. These results support the placement of permanent accesses (fistula or PD catheter) before the start of dialysis to avoid use of HD catheters.
We examined the Clostridium difficile infection rate and risk factors in an outpatient dialysis cohort. The Cox proportional hazard for developing C. difficile infection was significantly higher with high comorbidity index and low serum albumin level. Conversely, it was lower for patients who had frequent bloodstream and dialysis access-related infections.
The frequency and type of positive blood culture in HD patients are highly associated with type of access used. The high rate of CNS bacteremia with CVC in conjunction with low ESI rate suggests that contamination at the time of accessing the catheter may be the problem. Staff training was followed by a decrease in infection rates. Trending organism-specific bacteremia infection rates in HD units may provide important clues to bacteremia causality and thus prevention.
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