Incident elderly patients on peritoneal dialysis : epidemiological characteristics and modality impact on survival time

Joint Authors

Franco, Marcia R. G.
Bastos, Marcus G.
Qurayshi, Abd R.
Schreider, Alyne
Bastos, Kleyton de Andrade
Divino Filho, Jose C.
Fernandes, Natalia M. S.

Source

Saudi Journal of Kidney Diseases and Transplantation

Issue

Vol. 28, Issue 4 (31 Aug. 2017), pp.782-791, 10 p.

Publisher

Saudi Center for Organ Transplantation

Publication Date

2017-08-31

Country of Publication

Saudi Arabia

No. of Pages

10

Main Subjects

Medicine

Topics

Abstract EN

Aging of the population and the increased prevalence of diseases such as diabetes and arterial hypertension result in an increasing need of dialysis treatment.

Herein we describe a cohort of elderly patients on peritoneal dialysis (PD) and assess the influence of the modality on the long-term survival.

Out of a multicenter prospective cohort of 2,144 BRAZPD PD incident patients during a period from December 2004 to October 2007, 762 elderly adults, defined as patients ≥65-year-old, were eligible for the study, 413 started on automated PD (APD) and 349 on continuous ambulatory PD (CAPD).

Patients were followed until death, transfer to hemodialysis, recovery of renal function, loss to follow–up, or transplantation.

Demographics and clinical data were evaluated at baseline and described as mean ± standard deviation, median, or percentage.

Competing risk and time-dependent Cox analysis were performed, having dialysis modality APD] vs.

CAPD as a dependent variable, as hazard ratio (HR) is not proportional throughout the therapy time.

Mean age was 74.5 ± 6.8 years in APD, 74.6 ± 6.7 in CAPD, 50.8% females in APD, 54.4% in CAPD.

The frequently observed comorbidities were diabetes (52.3% in APD and 47% in CAPD) and left ventricular hypertrophy (36.3% in APD and 46.1% in CAPD) whereas 93.6% presented Davies score ≥2.

In Cox time-dependent analysis, HR did not show difference up to 18 months HR = 1.11, confidence interval (CI) = 0.85–1.46], but thereafter, APD modality revealed lower risk of mortality (HR = 0.25, CI = 0.0073–0.86), when compared with CAPD.

After adjustment for the confounding factors, CAPD presented a higher risk of mortality (HR = 4.50, CI = 1.29–15.64).

No differences in survival were observed up to 18 months of therapy; however, beyond 18 months, APD modality was a protection factor

American Psychological Association (APA)

Franco, Marcia R. G.& Bastos, Marcus G.& Qurayshi, Abd R.& Schreider, Alyne& Bastos, Kleyton de Andrade& Divino Filho, Jose C.…[et al.]. 2017. Incident elderly patients on peritoneal dialysis : epidemiological characteristics and modality impact on survival time. Saudi Journal of Kidney Diseases and Transplantation،Vol. 28, no. 4, pp.782-791.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-776134

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Franco, Marcia R. G.…[et al.]. Incident elderly patients on peritoneal dialysis : epidemiological characteristics and modality impact on survival time. Saudi Journal of Kidney Diseases and Transplantation Vol. 28, no. 4 (Jul. / Aug. 2017), pp.782-791.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-776134

American Medical Association (AMA)

Franco, Marcia R. G.& Bastos, Marcus G.& Qurayshi, Abd R.& Schreider, Alyne& Bastos, Kleyton de Andrade& Divino Filho, Jose C.…[et al.]. Incident elderly patients on peritoneal dialysis : epidemiological characteristics and modality impact on survival time. Saudi Journal of Kidney Diseases and Transplantation. 2017. Vol. 28, no. 4, pp.782-791.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-776134

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references : p. 798-791

Record ID

BIM-776134