Charles Jun Han Ng1,2, Cheng Boon Poh1, Sreekanth Koduri1, Debajyoti Malakar Roy1, Chuin Siau3, Noelle Louise Lim4, Chang Yin Chionh5. 1. Department of Renal Medicine, Changi General Hospital, 2 Simei Street 3, Singapore, 529889, Singapore. 2. SingHealth Residency (Renal Medicine), Singapore Health Services, Singapore, Singapore. 3. Department of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, Changi General Hospital, Singapore, Singapore. 4. Department of Anaesthesia and Surgical Intensive Care, Changi General Hospital, Singapore, Singapore. 5. Department of Renal Medicine, Changi General Hospital, 2 Simei Street 3, Singapore, 529889, Singapore. kidneyinjury@gmail.com.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Regional citrate anti-coagulation (RCA) is the recommended anti-coagulation for continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT). Citrated replacement fluids provide convenience but may compromise effluent delivery when adjusted to maintain circuit ionised calcium levels (circuit-iCa). This study aims to evaluate the effect of RCA titration on the delivered CRRT effluent dose. METHODS: This prospective observational study evaluated patients on RCA-CRRT in continuous veno-venous hemodiafiltration mode. Citrated replacement fluid was titrated to target circuit-iCa 0.26-0.40 mmol/L. Patients were then stratified into 'reduced-dose' who required citrate down-titration and 'stable-dose' who did not. RESULTS: Data from 200 RCA-CRRT sessions were collected. The reduced-dose RCA group (n = 114) had higher median initial citrate dose (3.00 vs 2.50; P < 0.001) but lower time-averaged dose (2.49 vs 2.60; P < 0.001). In addition, median prescribed effluent dose was 33.3 mL/kg/h (28.6-39.2) but median delivered effluent dose was significantly lower at 29.9 mL/kg/h (25.4-36.9; P < 0.001). Mortality was higher in the reduced-dose RCA group (39.5% vs 25.6%; P = 0.022) and in patients with delivered-to-prescribed effluent dose ratio of < 0.9 vs ≥ 0.9 (51.3% vs 29.2%; P = 0.014). CONCLUSION: RCA titration can significantly impact delivered CRRT effluent dose. Measures should be taken to address the CRRT dose deficit and prevent poor outcomes due to inadequate dialysis.
BACKGROUND: Regional citrate anti-coagulation (RCA) is the recommended anti-coagulation for continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT). Citrated replacement fluids provide convenience but may compromise effluent delivery when adjusted to maintain circuit ionised calcium levels (circuit-iCa). This study aims to evaluate the effect of RCA titration on the delivered CRRT effluent dose. METHODS: This prospective observational study evaluated patients on RCA-CRRT in continuous veno-venous hemodiafiltration mode. Citrated replacement fluid was titrated to target circuit-iCa 0.26-0.40 mmol/L. Patients were then stratified into 'reduced-dose' who required citrate down-titration and 'stable-dose' who did not. RESULTS: Data from 200 RCA-CRRT sessions were collected. The reduced-dose RCA group (n = 114) had higher median initial citrate dose (3.00 vs 2.50; P < 0.001) but lower time-averaged dose (2.49 vs 2.60; P < 0.001). In addition, median prescribed effluent dose was 33.3 mL/kg/h (28.6-39.2) but median delivered effluent dose was significantly lower at 29.9 mL/kg/h (25.4-36.9; P < 0.001). Mortality was higher in the reduced-dose RCA group (39.5% vs 25.6%; P = 0.022) and in patients with delivered-to-prescribed effluent dose ratio of < 0.9 vs ≥ 0.9 (51.3% vs 29.2%; P = 0.014). CONCLUSION: RCA titration can significantly impact delivered CRRT effluent dose. Measures should be taken to address the CRRT dose deficit and prevent poor outcomes due to inadequate dialysis.
Authors: Michiel G H Betjes; Daniella van Oosterom; Madelon van Agteren; Jaqueline van de Wetering Journal: J Nephrol Date: 2007 Sep-Oct Impact factor: 3.902