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Associations between hemodialysis access type and clinical outcomes: a systematic review. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Clinical practice guidelines recommend arteriovenous fistulas as the best option for hemodialysis access, yet the relationship between access type and clinical outcomes is debated.
  • A systematic review of 62 cohort studies involving over half a million participants was conducted to examine the links between vascular access types (fistula, graft, catheter) and risks for death, infection, and cardiovascular events.
  • The results indicated that patients using catheters faced significantly higher risks for mortality, infections, and cardiovascular issues compared to those with fistulas or grafts, with fistulas showing the lowest associated risks overall.

Article Abstract

Clinical practice guidelines recommend an arteriovenous fistula as the preferred vascular access for hemodialysis, but quantitative associations between vascular access type and various clinical outcomes remain controversial. We performed a systematic review of cohort studies to evaluate the associations between type of vascular access (arteriovenous fistula, arteriovenous graft, and central venous catheter) and risk for death, infection, and major cardiovascular events. We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, and article reference lists and extracted data describing study design, participants, vascular access type, clinical outcomes, and risk for bias. We identified 3965 citations, of which 67 (62 cohort studies comprising 586,337 participants) met our inclusion criteria. In a random effects meta-analysis, compared with persons with fistulas, those individuals using catheters had higher risks for all-cause mortality (risk ratio=1.53, 95% CI=1.41-1.67), fatal infections (2.12, 1.79-2.52), and cardiovascular events (1.38, 1.24-1.54). Similarly, compared with persons with grafts, those individuals using catheters had higher risks for mortality (1.38, 1.25-1.52), fatal infections (1.49, 1.15-1.93), and cardiovascular events (1.26, 1.11-1.43). Compared with persons with fistulas, those individuals with grafts had increased all-cause mortality (1.18, 1.09-1.27) and fatal infection (1.36, 1.17-1.58), but we did not detect a difference in the risk for cardiovascular events (1.07, 0.95-1.21). The risk for bias, especially selection bias, was high. In conclusion, persons using catheters for hemodialysis seem to have the highest risks for death, infections, and cardiovascular events compared with other vascular access types, and patients with usable fistulas have the lowest risk.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3582202PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1681/ASN.2012070643DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

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