Dialysis may not prolong patients’ survival
Among kidney failure patients aged ≥80 years, there was no statistically significant
survival advantage for those who chose dialysis over conservative management.'
Half or more of all patients on dialysis are aged
≥65 years in some countries.
Newswise, March 18, 2016— A new study found no significant
survival advantage among elderly kidney failure patients who chose dialysis
over conservative management. The findings, which appear in an upcoming issue
of the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology (CJASN),
indicate that conservative care may be a reasonable choice for selected older
patients.
Worldwide, increasing numbers of older patients are developing
kidney failure, or end-stage renal disease (ESRD), that can be treated with
renal replacement therapy such as kidney transplantation or dialysis.
Some experts have questioned whether older patients, who often
have other medical conditions, are likely to benefit from these treatment
options and should instead opt to be treated conservatively, with care that
includes control of fluid and electrolyte balance, correcting anemia, and
providing appropriate palliative and end of life care.
To look at the issue, a team in the country where hemodialysis
was originally invented compared survival in older patients with ESRD who chose
either dialysis (204 patients) or conservative management (107 patients)
between 2004 and 2014. In this single-center observational study, investigators
led by Wouter Verberne, MD and Willem Jan Bos, MD,PhD (St. Antonius Hospital,
Nieuwegein, in The Netherlands) found no statistically significant survival
advantage among patients aged ≥80 years old who chose dialysis over
conservative management. In general, patients with additional medical illnesses
died sooner than patients without comorbidities.
“We do not conclude that dialysis treatment should not be
given to anybody ≥80 years or with severe comorbidity, but we show that the
treatment is on average of little advantage regarding survival,” said Dr.
Verberne.
“Our next task is to predict who benefits and who does not.
Until we are able to give a better prediction of the results of dialysis
treatment at high age, we can merely suggest that conservative management is an
option which should honestly be discussed when ESRD is approaching.” Dr.
Verberne added that more research is needed to determine how different
treatment options affect patients’ other outcomes, such as quality of life and
severity of symptoms.
In an accompanying editorial, Helen Tam-Tham, MSc and Chandra
Thomas, MSc, MD (University of Calgary, in Canada) noted that conservative
management programs can vary considerably from place to place. “Further
research is necessary for enhancing and evaluating the multiple components
necessary for a comprehensive conservative management program,” they wrote.
Study co-authors include A.B.M. Tom Geers, MD, PhD, Wilbert
Jellema, MD, PhD, Hieronymus Vincent, MD, PhD, and Johannes van Delden, MD,
PhD.
Disclosures: This research was made possible thanks to an
unrestricted grant from Roche (Woerden, The Netherlands) to the St. Antonius
Research Fund.
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