| Literature DB >> 32534129 |
Maryanne Y Sourial1, Mina H Sourial2, Rochelle Dalsan2, Jay Graham3, Michael Ross2, Wei Chen4, Ladan Golestaneh2.
Abstract
At Montefiore Medical Center in The Bronx, NY, the first case of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) was admitted on March 11, 2020. At the height of the pandemic, there were 855 patients with COVID-19 admitted on April 13, 2020. Due to high demand for dialysis and shortages of staff and supplies, we started an urgent peritoneal dialysis (PD) program. From April 1 to April 22, a total of 30 patients were started on PD. Of those 30 patients, 14 died during their hospitalization, 8 were discharged, and 8 were still hospitalized as of May 14, 2020. Although the PD program was successful in its ability to provide much-needed kidney replacement therapy when hemodialysis was not available, challenges to delivering adequate PD dosage included difficulties providing nurse training and availability of supplies. Providing adequate clearance and ultrafiltration for patients in intensive care units was especially difficult due to the high prevalence of a hypercatabolic state, volume overload, and prone positioning. PD was more easily performed in non-critically ill patients outside the intensive care unit. Despite these challenges, we demonstrate that urgent PD is a feasible alternative to hemodialysis in situations with critical resource shortages. Published by Elsevier Inc.Entities:
Keywords: COVID nephropathy; COVID-19; acute care; acute kidney injury (AKI); acute renal failure (ARF); continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT); coronavirus; dialysis; intensive care unit (ICU); peritoneal dialysis (PD); resource allocation; resource shortage; urgent-start PD
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32534129 PMCID: PMC7287441 DOI: 10.1053/j.ajkd.2020.06.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Kidney Dis ISSN: 0272-6386 Impact factor: 8.860
Summary of Challenges and Solutions Encountered During Startup of Urgent PD Program
| Situation | Challenge | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Surge of patients with AKI requiring KRT | Limited resources (including machines and dialysate bags) for iHD and CKRT | Reduce iHD and CKRT duration to maximize no. of treatments; temporarily use 1.5% dextrose PD fluid as CKRT dialysate when no CKRT dialysate was available; add urgent PD to increase KRT capacity |
| Obtaining supplies | Identifying the quantity estimated for the surge of patients | 1 experienced nephrologist and 2 nurses with extensive PD experience placed order with supplier for predicted number of 25 patients to be started on PD over the following 2 wks |
| Access needed to start PD | Limited/no OR time meant patients needing a PD catheter were waitlisted or unable to receive a catheter | Transplant surgeons performed bedside laparoscopically assisted flexible PD catheter placement for intubated and ICU patients; interventional radiologists performed fluoroscopy-guided flexible PD catheter placement for nonintubated non-ICU patients |
| Limited staff | Limited nursing staff (due to illness or higher patient to nursing ratio than usual) available to perform iHD, CKRT, or PD | For ICUs in which there were no PD-trained nurses available, a clinical educator provided a PD training session for nurses interested in/who had the time to learn PD; the urgent PD service conducted patient rounds and performed 1-2 manual exchanges per day per patient in addition to providing training to nurses and house staff residents during the daytime |
| More patients started on PD | As the program grew rapidly, the urgent PD service was becoming overwhelmed as demand increased | Urgent PD service increased in staff and more time was spent educating nurses and residents caring for PD patients on how to perform manual exchanges of PD; availability of cyclers helped with the work load of the urgent PD service nephrologists and the patients’ nurses because interaction with machine was limited when the nephrologists set up the machine for each patient |
| Prone positioning | Limited the use of PD to when patients were supine to avoid increased intra-abdominal pressure during prone positioning, which may cause dyssynchrony with the ventilator | Supplemental iHD or CKRT was provided while patients were prone depending on patient location (some units did not have water connections available for iHD) as well as machine, dialysate, and nursing staff availability; patients received PD when supine but this was often limited to 1-4 exchanges depending on the duration of supination |
Abbreviations: AKI, acute kidney injury; CKRT, continuous kidney replacement therapy; ICU, intensive care unit; iHD, intermittent hemodialysis; KRT, kidney replacement therapy; OR, operating room; PD, peritoneal dialysis.
Descriptive Statistics for the Urgent PD Program
| Characteristic | Value |
|---|---|
| No. of patients started on PD, April 1-22 | 30 |
| Patient location at time of PD initiation | |
| Ward | 12/30 (40%) |
| ICU | 18/30 (60%) |
| Mechanical ventilation status | |
| Intubated | 22/30 (73%) |
| Placed in prone position | 16/22 (73%) |
| Never placed in prone position | 6/22 (27%) |
| Nonintubated | 8/30 (27%) |
| Placed in prone position | 1/8 (13%) |
| Never placed in prone position | 7/8 (88%) |
| Supplemental KRT | |
| CKRT (at any point after starting PD) | 5/30 (17%) |
| iHD (at any point after starting PD) | 6/30 (20%) |
| Modality switch | |
| To CKRT (at any point after starting PD) | 2/30 (7%) |
| To iHD (at any point after starting PD) | 7/30 (23%) |
| Follow-up as of May 14, 2020 | |
| Still hospitalized | 8/30 (27%) |
| Still on PD | 0/8 (0%) |
| Still on iHD/CKRT (no longer on PD) | 4/8 (50%) |
| With kidney recovery (no longer on KRT) | 4/8 (50%) |
| Died during hospitalization | 14/30 (47%) |
| With AKI requiring KRT at time of death | 13/14 (93%) |
| With kidney recovery (no longer on KRT) at time of death | 1/14 (7%) |
| Discharged home | 8/30 (27%) |
| Still on PD | 3/8 (38%) |
| With kidney recovery (no longer on KRT) | 5/8 (63%) |
Abbreviations: AKI, acute kidney injury; CKRT, continuous kidney replacement therapy; ICU, intensive care unit; iHD, intermittent hemodialysis; KRT, kidney replacement therapy; PD, peritoneal dialysis.
Subgroups are not mutually exclusive.