Dialysis adequacy indices and body composition in male and female patients on peritoneal dialysis.

Perit Dial Int

Institute of Biocybernetics and Biomedical Engineering, Polish Academy of Sciences, Department for Mathematical Modelling of Physiological Processes, Warsaw, Poland; Unidad de Investigacion Medica en Enfermedades Nefrologicas, Hospital de Especialidades, Centro Medico Nacional Siglo XXI, Mexico City, Mexico; and Karolinska Institutet, Divisions of Baxter Novum and Renal Medicine, Department of Clinical Science, Intervention and Technology, Stockholm, Sweden.

Published: June 2014

Objectives: Creatinine clearance scaled to body surface area (BSA) and urea KT/V normalized to total body water (TBW) are used as indices for peritoneal dialysis (PD) adequacy. We investigated relationships of indices of dialysis adequacy (including KT/V, KT, clearance, dialysate over plasma concentration ratio) and anthropometric and body composition parameters (BSA, TBW, body mass index (BMI), weight, height, fat mass (FM), and fat-free mass (FFM)) in male and female patients on continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis.

Methods: Ninety-nine stable patients (56 males) performed four 24-hr collections of drained dialysate for four dialysis schedules with three daily exchanges of glucose 1.36% and one night exchange of either: 1) glucose 1.36%, 2) glucose 2.27%, 3) glucose 3.86% or 4) icodextrin 7.5%.

Results: KT and dialysate over plasma concentration ratio, CD/CP, for urea and creatinine were similar for males and females and, in general, did not depend on body-size parameters including V (= TBW), which means that the overall capacity of the transport system in females and males is similar. However, after normalization of KT to V or 1.73/BSA yielding KT/V and creatinine clearance, Cl(1.73/BSA), respectively, the normalized indices were substantially higher in females than in males and correlated inversely with body-size parameters, especially in males.

Conclusions: As KT/V depends strongly on body size, treatment target values for KT/V should take body size and therefore also gender into account. As KT is less influenced by body size, body composition and gender, KT should be considered as a potential auxiliary index in PD.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4079488PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3747/pdi.2013.00018DOI Listing

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