Canadian Journal of Kidney Health and Disease (Feb 2020)

Major Outcomes With Personalized Dialysate TEMPerature (MyTEMP): Rationale and Design of a Pragmatic, Registry-Based, Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial

  • Ahmed A. Al-Jaishi,
  • Christopher W. McIntyre,
  • Jessica M. Sontrop,
  • Stephanie N. Dixon,
  • Sierra Anderson,
  • Amit Bagga,
  • Derek Benjamin,
  • David Berry,
  • Peter G. Blake,
  • Laura Chambers,
  • Patricia C. K. Chan,
  • Nicole Delbrouck,
  • P. J. Devereaux,
  • Luis F. Ferreira-Divino,
  • Richard Goluch,
  • Laura Gregor,
  • Jeremy M. Grimshaw,
  • Garth Hanson,
  • Eduard Iliescu,
  • Arsh K. Jain,
  • Charmaine E. Lok,
  • Reem A. Mustafa,
  • Bharat Nathoo,
  • Gihad E. Nesrallah,
  • Matthew J. Oliver,
  • Sanjay Pandeya,
  • Malvinder S. Parmar,
  • David Perkins,
  • Justin Presseau,
  • Eli Rabin,
  • Joanna Sasal,
  • Tanya Shulman,
  • Manish M. Sood,
  • Andrew Steele,
  • Paul Tam,
  • Daniel Tascona,
  • Davinder Wadehra,
  • Ron Wald,
  • Michael Walsh,
  • Paul Watson,
  • Walter Wodchis,
  • Phillip Zager,
  • Merrick Zwarenstein,
  • Amit X. Garg

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/2054358119887988
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

Read online

Background: Small randomized trials demonstrated that a lower compared with higher dialysate temperature reduced the average drop in intradialytic blood pressure. Some observational studies demonstrated that a lower compared with higher dialysate temperature was associated with a lower risk of all-cause mortality and cardiovascular mortality. There is now the need for a large randomized trial that compares the effect of a low vs high dialysate temperature on major cardiovascular outcomes. Objective: The purpose of this study is to test the effect of outpatient hemodialysis centers randomized to (1) a personalized temperature-reduced dialysate protocol or (2) a standard-temperature dialysate protocol for 4 years on cardiovascular-related death and hospitalizations. Design: The design of the study is a pragmatic, registry-based, open-label, cluster randomized controlled trial. Setting: Hemodialysis centers in Ontario, Canada, were randomized on February 1, 2017, for a trial start date of April 3, 2017, and end date of March 31, 2021. Participants: In total, 84 hemodialysis centers will care for approximately 15 500 patients and provide over 4 million dialysis sessions over a 4-year follow-up. Intervention: Hemodialysis centers were randomized (1:1) to provide (1) a personalized temperature-reduced dialysate protocol or (2) a standard-temperature dialysate protocol of 36.5°C. For the personalized protocol, nurses set the dialysate temperature between 0.5°C and 0.9°C below the patient’s predialysis body temperature for each dialysis session, to a minimum dialysate temperature of 35.5°C. Primary outcome: A composite of cardiovascular-related death or major cardiovascular-related hospitalization (a hospital admission with myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, or ischemic stroke) captured in Ontario health care administrative databases. Planned primary analysis: The primary analysis will follow an intent-to-treat approach. The hazard ratio of time-to-first event will be estimated from a Cox model. Within-center correlation will be considered using a robust sandwich estimator. Observation time will be censored on the trial end date or when patients die from a noncardiovascular event. Trial Registration: www.clinicaltrials.gov ; identifier: NCT02628366.