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When a Kidney Transplant fails, Home-Based
Dialysis is an option
Newswise, January 14, 2011 — Patients
returning to dialysis after kidney
transplant failure present unique challenges
compared with other dialysis patients: they
have been exposed to very powerful
immunosuppressive medications and have been
on dialysis for a longer period of time than
other dialysis patients.
This puts them at particularly high risk for
various complications and death.
According to a study appearing in an
upcoming issue of the Clinical
Journal of the American Society Nephrology (CJASN),
despite complications, these patients can
choose to undergo dialysis in the comfort of
their own homes.
Patients who have had a kidney transplant
are used to managing their own therapy,
enjoying the ability to travel, and living a
relatively flexible lifestyle and may
therefore be well-suited to peritoneal
dialysis (home-based) rather than
hemodialysis (clinic-based), when they
return to dialysis after transplant failure.
Despite the many potential benefits of
peritoneal dialysis over hemodialysis—including
ease of performing the therapy at home,
avoidance of hospital visits several times a
week, and more flexibility to travel—only a
very small proportion of patients returning
to dialysis after transplant failure end up
choosing to undergo peritoneal dialysis in
both Canada and the United States.
Jeffrey Perl, MD (St. Michael’s Hospital,
University of Toronto, Canada) and his
colleagues evaluated the impact that
dialysis type (peritoneal vs. hemodialysis)
has on the survival of patients returning to
dialysis after transplant failure.
The investigators studied 2,110 adult
Canadian patients who initiated dialysis
after their kidney transplant failed between
January 1991 and December 2005. The
researchers evaluated the impact of initial
dialysis type on early (2-year), late (after
2 years), and overall deaths.
Hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis
patients died at similar rates in all
analyses (early, late, and overall).
“It is important to empower patients who
have kidney transplant failure to realize
that despite the severe disappointment of
returning to dialysis, they still have many
options for dialysis therapy, which include
opportunities for home-based therapies,”
said Dr. Perl.
“I hope this research helps guide patients
and the health care professionals treating
them to make informed decisions regarding
dialysis modality decisions, namely that
peritoneal dialysis is as effective a
therapy as hemodialysis in patients
returning to dialysis after kidney
transplant failure.”
Study co-authors include Omar Hasan, MBBS
(Brigham and Women’s Hospital); Joanne
Bargman, MD, S. Vanita Jassal, MD
(University of Toronto, Canada); Depeng
Jiang, PhD (Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute
and St. Michael’s Hospital, University of
Toronto, Canada); Yingbo Na (Canadian
Institute of Health Information and Canadian
Organ Replacement Register, in Toronto,
Canada); and John Gill, MD (St. Paul’s
Hospital, University of British Columbia, in
Vancouver, Canada).
Disclosures: Jeffrey Perl received funding
from a Kidney Foundation of Canada
Biomedical Fellowship. The other authors
reported no financial disclosures.