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Renal replacement therapy and the elderly.

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... congestive heart failure, and underweight were most strongly associated with death. ... Cohort study of elderly patients who have end-stage renal disease. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Renal replacement therapy and the elderly.


1
Renal replacement therapy and the elderly.
  • Misha Kotlov, MD
  • July 10, 2007

2
Demographics.
  • In the US, the primary treatment of geriatric
    ESRD patients ( 75 yrs) is in-center
    hemodialysis (96 )
  • CAPD/CCPD account for approximately 3.5
  • The average age of the patient undergoing
    dialysis in the US has been steadily increasingly
    over the last several decades.
  • In 2000 the average age was approximately 62 yrs.
  • According to United States Renal Data System
    database, the number of patients 80 yrs of age
    who initiated dialysis increased from 7054
    patients in 1996 to 13,577 individuals in 2003.

3
Issues at hand.
  • Important points to consider when evaluating the
    treatment of elderly patients with ESRD include
  • Life expectancy of such patients
  • Effect of ESRD on life expectancy and quality of
    life
  • HD vs PD
  • Timing of access placement

4
Effect of Age, Gender, and Diabetes on Excess
Death in ESRD. JASN 182125-2134, 2007
  • All incident dialysis patients between January
    1999-December 2003 in Rhone-Alpes region, France.
  • 3025 patients were analyzed.
  • Age and gender standardized mortality ratio (SMR)
    was computed in ESRD vs general population of the
    region.
  • Overall and by patient subgroups.

5
  • Population 6 million.
  • Rhône-Alpes is located in the east of France. The
    east of the region contains the western part of
    the Alps. The highest peak is Mont Blanc. The
    central part of the region is taken up with the
    valley of the Rhône and the Saône. The confluence
    of these two rivers is at Lyon, the capital of
    the region.

6
There are three kinds of lies lies, damned
lies, and statistics.Benjamin Disraeli, Prime
Minister of England end of 19 century.
  • Standardized Mortality Ratio
  • SMR Observed Deaths / Expected Deaths
  • Excess Deaths Observed Deaths - Expected Deaths
  • Charlson Index contains 19 categories of
    comorbidity, which are primarily defined using
    ICD-9-CM diagnoses codes.
  • Each category has an associated weight, which is
    based on the adjusted risk of one-year mortality.
  • The overall comorbidity score reflects the
    cumulative increased likelihood of one-year
    mortality the higher the score, the more severe
    the burden of comorbidity.

7
Characteristics of study population.
  • Total cohort 3025 patients.
  • Age 75-84 n719 85 n139
  • Gender ration (m/f) 1.7
  • 75 of pt 75 were treated with HD.

8
SMR in ESRF versus GP of the same age and the
same gender.
9
Kaplan-Meier survival curves by age group
andstandardized mortality ratios by age group.
10
Octogenerians and nonagenarians starting dialysis
in the US.Ann Intern Med 146177-183, 2007
  • USRDS Standard Analysis Files from 1996 through
    2003 for these analyses.
  • Included all persons 65 years of age and older
    who began dialysis between 1 January 1996 and 31
    December 2003 (n350,831).
  • The focus of these analyses was the very elderly
  • Included patients 65 to 79 years of age (the
    young elderly) in the analyses as a reference
    group.
  • Excluded patients initiating dialysis after a
    failed kidney transplantation (n4,693)

11
Incidence of dialysis initiation.
12
Trends in dialysis initiation.
  • 1996-2003, 78,419 octogenarians and 5,577
    nonagenarians initiated dialysis in the United
    States.
  • 7,054 pts in 1996 ? 13,577 pts in 2003 average
    annual increase 8.6(2.3) in 80-84 yrs and
    11.9(3.2) 85 yrs.
  • Annual increase in dialysis initiation among
    patients 65-79 yrs was 3.5(0).
  • Accounting for population growth, rates of
    dialysis initiation increased by 57 among
    octogenarians and nonagenarians from 1996 to
    2003.
  • For persons older than 84 years of age, rates of
    dialysis initiation were dramatically lower than
    other elderly age groups this effect persisted
    over time.

13
Survival.
14
Survival.
  • One year mortality rate for octogenarians and
    nonagenarians starting dialysis was 46 and did
    not change over the 7-year period.
  • Associated clinical characteristics
    nonambulatory status, low serum albumin
    concentration, congestive heart failure, and
    underweight were most strongly associated with
    death.

15
Comparison and Survival of HD and PD in the
elderly. Seminars in Dialysis 15298-102, 2002
  • Inclusion Initiated dialysis during the years
    19951997, 67 yrs at the time of initiation.
    (N89,193).
  • Source Medicare claims.
  • Dialytic modality Determined on day 90 of ESRD
    care, 60 days on this modality.
  • After excluding all pts with missing info
    N70,208 6,695 (10) on PD and 63,513 (90) on
    HD
  • Interval Poisson regression was used to calculate
    adjusted death rates and relative risks between
    the PD and HD populations.
  • Analyses were adjusted for age, gender, race ,
    geographic location (six groups of renal
    networks), Charlson comorbidity index score,
    baseline GFR, prior hospital days, incidence year
    (1995, 1996, 1997), and primary cause of renal
    failure (diabetes, hypertension, GN, other).
  • Separate analyses were performed for the diabetic
    and nondiabetic populations.

16
Table 1.
17
Relative risk of death.
  • Death rates per 1000 patient years

18
Interval death rates DM and non-DM.
19
Interval relative risks (HDPD) of death for Dm
vs non-DM.
20
The longer, the better?
  • 12 month prospective cohort study of outcomes in
    221 patients with ESRD, started on HD, age 70
    yrs.
  • Recruted from 4 hospital based dialysis units.
  • Quality of life was assessed by interview at 90
    days after initiation of HD in new patients and
    at 5 months to 10.8 yrs in chronic patients.
  • SF-36 physical component summary (PCS) and mental
    component summary (MCS) scores were calculated
  • High scores indicate good quality of life.
  • SF-36 scores were compared with UK general
    population norms for people 70 years or over and
    US norms for adults aged 6574 and 75 years or
    over.
  • Lancet 2000

21
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22
Dismal rehabilitation in geriatric inner-city
hemodialysis patients.E. Freidman et al. JAMA
1994
  • Cohort study of elderly patients who have
    end-stage renal disease.
  • Current status was compared with patient's
    recollection of functional activity level 2 years
    before commencing maintenance hemodialysis.
  • Seven outpatient, hospital-affiliated and private
    hemodialysis units in Brooklyn, NY.
  • 104 patients aged 65 years or older who were
    receiving maintenance hemodialysis for at least 6
    months.
  • Measured outcome A score of 76 or greater on a
    modified Karnofsky scale indicated independent
    function at a level that permitted participation
    in activities beyond those mandated by the
    hemodialysis regimen.

23
Karnofsky performance scale.
  • 100 - normal, no complaints, no signs of disease
  • 90 - capable of normal activity, few symptoms or
    signs of disease
  • 80 - normal activity with some difficulty, some
    symptoms or signs
  • 70 - caring for self, not capable of normal
    activity or work
  • 60 - requiring some help, can take care of most
    personal requirements
  • 50 - requires help often, requires frequent
    medical care
  • 40 - disabled, requires special care and help
  • 30 - severely disabled, hospital admission
    indicated but no risk of death
  • 20 - very ill, urgently requiring admission,
    requires supportive measures or treatment
  • 10 - moribund, rapidly progressive fatal disease
    processes
  • 0 - death.

24
Results.
  • Karnofsky score deteriorated to average of 66
    compared with patients' recollection of a mean
    score of 84 (P of hemodialysis.
  • Diabetic patients had a lower score than
    nondiabetic patients.
  • Within the diabetic subset, severe debility
    constrained 71 patients (68) to limit all
    activity to their residence with the exception of
    travel to and from their dialysis facility.
  • 2 years prior to commencing dialytic therapy, 81
    diabetic patients (78) had interests and
    activities that took them outside their homes (P
  • CONCLUSIONS Maintenance hemodialysis does not
    return inner-city elderly patients to their
    predialysis level of functioning. Few elderly,
    diabetic hemodialysis patients conduct any
    substantive portion of their lives outside their
    homes.

25
When to refer patients with chronic kidney
diseasefor vascular access surgery Should age
be aconsideration? KI 71555-561,2007
  • Retrospective cohort study among 11,290
    non-dialysis patients with aneGFR of 25
    ml/min/1.73m2 based on 20002001 outpatient
    creatinine measurements in the Department of
    Veterans Affairs.
  • For each age group, the percentage of patients
    that had and had not received a permanent access
    by 1 year after cohort entry, and the percentage
    in each of these groups that died, started
    dialysis, or survived without dialysis was
    established.
  • Modeled the number of unnecessary procedures that
    would have occurred in theoretical scenarios
    based on existing vascular access guidelines.
  • The mean eGFR was 17.7 ml/min/1.73m2 at cohort
    entry.
  • Mean age of the patient cohort was 70 yrs.
  • 25 (n2870) of patients initiated dialysis
    within a year of cohort entry.
  • Only 39 (n1104) had undergone surgery to place
    a permanent access beforehand.

26
Permanent vascular access surgeries by age group.
A Percent of all cohort patients who received
pre-dialysis permanent access by the end of
follow-up. Estimates are provided with a 95
confidence interval. B Percent of patients who
initiated dialysis during follow-up that had
undergone permanent access placement before
initiation of dialysis. Estimates are provided
with a 95confidence interval.
27
One year outcome by age group.
28
Ratio of unnecessary to necessary permanent
access surgeries at different theoretical
referral eGFR thresholds by age and length of
follow-up.
a Referral threshold eGFR25 b Referral
threshold eGFR20 c Referral threshold eGFR15
29
Conclusion.
  • Rates of initiation of dialysis in elderly is
    increasing increase ckd prevalence, earlier
    initiation of dialysis, more liberal acceptance
    in dialysis programs.
  • Dialysis can significantly prolong life in
    elderly population.
  • Elderly seem to do better on HD vs PD.
  • QOL more studies needed.
  • Access when should avf/avg be placed in elderly ?
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