| Literature DB >> 32488753 |
Abstract
The reduction of the dismally high mortality of current end-stage renal disease patients maintained on conventional standard haemodialysis (HD) remains an unmet medical need. Online haemodiafiltration (HDF) modes with various sites of fluid substitution (post-, pre-, mixed- and mid-dilution) are increasingly used worldwide as promising alternatives to conventional HD. Large scale cohort studies, post hoc analyses of randomized trials, and individual participant meta-analyses suggest that post-dilution and pre-dilution, especially with high substitution volumes, improve outcomes compared with conventional standard HD. However, there is no definitive proof of a survival advantage of HDF over standard HD. The different modes of high-volume HDF should be considered a therapeutic platform allowing to personalize and tailor routine HDF treatment. The selection of the HDF mode should be made according to individual patient characteristics. Utilizing high retention onset membranes, expanded haemodialysis (HDx) can achieve the same solute removal performance as HDF. Subgroups of high-volume OL-HDF patients could benefit from HDx. Ongoing and future trials should provide definitive proof for the superiority of high-volume OL-HDF over conventional HD or HDx to give guidance for the most favourable mode of dialytic therapy for clinical use.Entities:
Keywords: End-stage renal disease; Expanded haemodialysis; Haemodiafiltration; Survival
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32488753 PMCID: PMC7378113 DOI: 10.1007/s11255-020-02489-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Urol Nephrol ISSN: 0301-1623 Impact factor: 2.370
Principles of high-volume OL-HDF
| High-volume OL-HDF dilution mode | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Post | Pre | Mixed | |
| Convective clearance (middle molecules) | +++ | ++ | +++ |
| Diffusive clearance (small solute) | +++ | + | +++ |
| Biocompatibility | +++ | +++ | +++ |
Modes of high-volume online haemodiafiltration (OL-HDF)
| Mode of HDF | Replacement volumes |
|---|---|
| Post-dilution OL-HDF | Ultrafiltration followed by infusion of sterile replacement fluid |
| Pre-dilution OL-HDF | Infusion of sterile replacement fluid followed by ultrafiltration |
| Mixed-dilution OL-HDF | Infusion of sterile replacement fluid before and after ultrafiltration |
| Mid-dilution OL-HDF | Infusion of sterile replacement fluid at the midpoint of ultrafiltration |
Performance of high-volume OL-HDF modes
| Technical requirements for high-volume HDF |
| Certified online HDF machines with ultrafiltration control |
| Haemodialyzer (high-flux membrane (1.6–2.2 m2), ultrafiltration coefficient > 20 mL/h/mmHg/m2, sieving coefficient > 0.6 for β2-microglobin) |
| Online production of sterile and non-pyrogenic substitution fluid |
| Adequate prescription of high-volume OL-HDF |
| Vascular access, arteriovenous fistula or graft, tunnelled central vein catheter |
| Blood flow rates: post-dilution or mixed-dilution 350–450 mL/min, pre-dilution OL-HDF 200–250 mL/min |
| Dialysate flow rate > 500 mL/min |
| Convection volume: post-dilution > 23 L per treatment; pre-dilution 50 L per treatment; mixed dilution > 35 L per treatment |
| Dialysate composition according the patients’ needs |
| Anticoagulation (unfractionated or low molecular heparin) |
| Duration > 4 h three times per week |
| Regular quality assessments, adherence to hygienic standards, education of the staff |
Selection criteria for mode of HDF
| General indications |
| There are no contraindications for high-volume OL-HDF |
| Patient age related indications |
| Children/adolescents |
| Young age and need for long-term dialysis treatment |
| Persistent symptoms of uraemia |
| Dialysis-related amyloidosis |
| Uraemic neuropathy (restless legs syndrome, sleep disturbances) |
| Uraemic pruritus |
| Prevention of skin hyperpigmentation |
| Intolerance of haemodialysis sessions |
| Nausea, vomiting |
| Cramps |
| Headache |
| Post-dialysis fatigue |
| Frequent symptomatic episodes of intradialytic hypotension |
| Specific indications |
| Specific diseases (high blood viscosity, cryoglobulinaemia, gammopathies, high haematocrit) |
| Poor vascular access |
| Slightly built body |
| Nonadherence (excessive interdialytic weight gain, patients unwilling to accept prolonged treatment sessions) |
As claimed by Tattersall [2], Canaud [3], Ronco [4], Masakane [8]