Frontiers in Immunology (May 2024)

The predictive value of systemic immune-inflammation index for vascular access survival in chronic hemodialysis patients

  • Song Ren,
  • Chuan Xv,
  • Dongqing Wang,
  • Dongqing Wang,
  • Yan Xiao,
  • Panpan Yu,
  • Deying Tang,
  • Juan Yang,
  • Xianglong Meng,
  • Tao Zhang,
  • Yaling Zhang,
  • Qiang He,
  • Quiang Li,
  • Martin Gallagher,
  • Yunlin Feng,
  • Yunlin Feng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2024.1382970
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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ObjectiveTo examine the prognostic values of systemic immune-inflammation indices of hemodialysis (HD) vascular access failure and develop a prediction model for vascular access failure based on the most pertinent systemic immune-inflammation index.Study designA prospective cohort study.Setting & participantsPatients undergoing autogenous HD vascular access surgeries or arteriovenous graft as a permanent hemodialysis access in a tertiary center in southwest China from January 2020 to June 2022.PredictorsSystemic immune-inflammation indices, including NLR, dNLR, AAPR, SIRI, SII, PNI, PLR, and LIPI, and clinical variables.OutcomesThe outcome was defined as survival of the hemodialysis access, with both occluded and stenotic access being considered as instances of access failure.Analytical approachCox proportional hazard regression model.Results2690 patients were included in the study population, of whom 658 experienced access failure during the follow-up period. The median duration of survival for HD vascular access was 18 months. The increased systemic immune-inflammation indices, including dNLR, NLR, SII, PNI, SIRI, PLR, and LIPI, are predictive of HD access failure, with SII demonstrating the strongest prognostic value. A simple SII-based prediction model for HD access failure was developed, achieving C-indexes of 0.6314 (95% CI: 0.6249 – 0.6589) and 0.6441 (95% CI: 0.6212 – 0.6670) for predicting 6- and 12-month access survival, respectively.ConclusionsSystemic immune-inflammation indices are significantly and negatively associated with HD vascular access survival. A simple SII-based prediction model was developed and anticipates further improvement through larger study cohort and validation from diverse centers.

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