| Literature DB >> 34418415 |
Carmine Zoccali1, Claudia Torino2, Francesca Mallamaci2, Pantelis Sarafidis3, Aikaterini Papagianni3, Robert Ekart4, Radovan Hojs4, Marian Klinger5, Krzysztof Letachowicz6, Danilo Fliser7, Sarah Seiler-Mußler7, Fabio Lizzi7, Andrzej Wiecek8, Agata Miskiewicz8, Kostas Siamopoulos9, Olga Balafa9, Itzchak Slotki10, Linda Shavit10, Aristeidis Stavroulopoulos11, Adrian Covic12, Dimitrie Siriopol12, Ziad A Massy13, Alexandre Seidowsky13, Yuri Battaglia14, Alberto Martinez-Castelao15, Carolina Polo-Torcal15, Marie-Jeanne Coudert-Krier16, Patrick Rossignol17, Enrico Fiaccadori18, Giuseppe Regolisti18, Thierry Hannedouche19, Thomas Bachelet20, Kitty J Jager21, Friedo W Dekker22, Rocco Tripepi2, Giovanni Tripepi2, Luna Gargani23, Rosa Sicari23, Eugenio Picano23, Gérard Michel London24.
Abstract
Lung congestion is a risk factor for all-cause and cardiovascular mortality in patients on chronic hemodialysis, and its estimation by ultrasound may be useful to guide ultrafiltration and drug therapy in this population. In an international, multi-center randomized controlled trial (NCT02310061) we investigated whether a lung ultrasound-guided treatment strategy improved a composite end point (all-cause death, non-fatal myocardial infarction, decompensated heart failure) vs usual care in patients receiving chronic hemodialysis with high cardiovascular risk. Patient-Reported Outcomes (Depression and the Standard Form 36 Quality of Life Questionnaire, SF36) were assessed as secondary outcomes. A total of 367 patients were enrolled: 183 in the active arm and 180 in the control arm. In the active arm, the pre-dialysis lung scan was used to titrate ultrafiltration during dialysis and drug treatment. Three hundred and seven patients completed the study: 152 in the active arm and 155 in the control arm. During a mean follow-up of 1.49 years, lung congestion was significantly more frequently relieved in the active (78%) than in the control (56%) arm and the intervention was safe. The primary composite end point did not significantly differ between the two study arms (Hazard Ratio 0.88; 95% Confidence Interval: 0.63-1.24). The risk for all-cause and cardiovascular hospitalization and the changes of left ventricular mass and function did not differ among the two groups. A post hoc analysis for recurrent episodes of decompensated heart failure (0.37; 0.15-0.93) and cardiovascular events (0.63; 0.41-0.97) showed a risk reduction for these outcomes in the active arm. There were no differences in patient-reported outcomes between groups. Thus, in patients on chronic hemodialysis with high cardiovascular risk, a treatment strategy guided by lung ultrasound effectively relieved lung congestion but was not more effective than usual care in improving the primary or secondary end points of the trial.Entities:
Keywords: ESRD; cardiovascular risk; chronic kidney failure; heart failure hemodialysis; lung congestion; lung ultrasound
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34418415 DOI: 10.1016/j.kint.2021.07.024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Kidney Int ISSN: 0085-2538 Impact factor: 10.612