PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

Hemodiafiltration is associated with reduced inflammation, oxidative stress and improved endothelial risk profile compared to high-flux hemodialysis in children.

  • Ayşe Ağbaş,
  • Nur Canpolat,
  • Salim Çalışkan,
  • Alev Yılmaz,
  • Hakan Ekmekçi,
  • Mark Mayes,
  • Helen Aitkenhead,
  • Franz Schaefer,
  • Lale Sever,
  • Rukshana Shroff

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0198320
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 6
p. e0198320

Abstract

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Randomized trials in adults have shown reduced all-cause and cardiovascular mortality on hemodiafiltration (HDF) compared to high-flux hemodialysis (HD), but the mechanisms leading to improved outcomes are not clear. We studied biomarkers of inflammation, oxidative stress, anti-oxidant capacity and endothelial dysfunction in 22 children (13 female, age 8-15 years). All children received HD for at least 3 months, and were then switched to HDF, keeping all dialysis related parameters and dialysis time constant. All the biomarkers of inflammation (ß2-microglobulin, IL-6, IL-10, high sensitive C-reactive protein [hsCRP]), oxidative stress (nitrotyrosine, advanced glycation end-products [AGEs], oxidized low density lipoprotein [ox-LDL] and anti-oxidant capacity) and endothelial dysfunction (asymmetric dimethyl arginine [ADMA], symmetric dimethyl arginine [SDMA]), were comparable between incident and prevalent patients on HD, suggesting that even a short dialysis vintage of 3 months on HD increases inflammation and endothelial stress. After 3 months of HDF therapy there was a significant reduction in ß2-microglobulin (pTrial registrationClinicalTrials.gov: NCT02063776.