Higher convection volume exchange with online hemodiafiltration is associated with survival advantage for dialysis patients: the effect of adjustment for body size

Publication date

2016

Authors

Davenport, Andrew
Peters, S. A EORCID 0000-0003-0346-5412
Bots, Michiel LORCID 0000-0003-2871-9810ISNI 0000000391893395
Canaud, Bernard
Grooteman, Muriel P C
Asci, Gulay
Locatelli, Francesco
Maduell, Francisco
Morena, Marion
Nubé, Menso J.

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Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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License

taverne

Abstract

Mortality remains high for hemodialysis patients. Online hemodiafiltration (OL-HDF) removes more middle-sized uremic toxins but outcomes of individual trials comparing OL-HDF with hemodialysis have been discrepant. Secondary analyses reported higher convective volumes, easier to achieve in larger patients, improved survival. Here we tested different methods to standardize OL-HDF convection volume on all-cause and cardiovascular mortality compared with hemodialysis. Pooled individual patient analysis of four prospective trials compared thirds of delivered convection volume with hemodialysis. Convection volumes were either not standardized or standardized to weight, body mass index, body surface area, and total body water. Data were analyzed by multivariable Cox proportional hazards modeling from 2793 patients. All-cause mortality was reduced when the convective dose was unstandardized or standardized to body surface area and total body water; hazard ratio (95% confidence intervals) of 0.65 (0.51–0.82), 0.74 (0.58–0.93), and 0.71 (0.56–0.93) for those receiving higher convective doses. Standardization by body weight or body mass index gave no significant survival advantage. Higher convection volumes were generally associated with greater survival benefit with OL-HDF, but results varied across different ways of standardization for body size. Thus, further studies should take body size into account when evaluating the impact of delivered convection volume on mortality end points.Kidney International advance online publication, 9 September 2015; doi:10.1038/ki.2015.264.

Keywords

Taverne, Nephrology, Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't, Comparative Study

Citation

Davenport, A, Peters, S A E, Bots, M L, Canaud, B, Grooteman, M P C, Asci, G, Locatelli, F, Maduell, F, Morena, M, Nubé, M J, Ok, E, Torres, F, Woodward, M & Blankestijn, P J 2016, 'Higher convection volume exchange with online hemodiafiltration is associated with survival advantage for dialysis patients : the effect of adjustment for body size', Kidney International, vol. 89, no. 1, pp. 193–199. https://doi.org/10.1038/ki.2015.264