PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

Clinical outcomes of incident peritoneal dialysis patients coming from kidney transplantation program: A case-control study.

  • Laurisson Albuquerque da Costa,
  • Maria Cláudia Cruz Andreoli,
  • Aluizio Barbosa Carvalho,
  • Sérgio Antonio Draibe,
  • José Osmar Medina Pestana,
  • Maria Eugênia Fernandes Canziani

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0227870
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
p. e0227870

Abstract

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INTRODUCTION:Brazil ranks second in the absolute number of transplantations in the world. Despite improvements in graft survival, many patients will progress to graft loss and return to dialysis. Concerns exist regarding adverse clinical outcomes in this population when undergone peritoneal dialysis (PD). OBJECTIVE:To compare the occurrence of mortality, technique failure, and peritonitis among incident patients in PD coming from either Tx or pre-dialysis treatment. METHODOLOGY:A retrospective study in which 47 adult patients with Tx failure (Tx group) were matched for age, gender, diabetes mellitus (DM), modality and start year of PD, with 1:1 predialysis patient (nTx group). The Fine-Gray competing risk model was used to analyze mortality and technique failure. RESULTS:Compared to nTx, the Tx group had a lower body mass index, serum potassium, and albumin concentrations. A higher ferritin level, transferrin saturation and the number of patients with positive serology for viral hepatitis were also observed in the Tx group. In the multivariate analysis, patients of the Tx group had 4.4-times higher risk of death (p = 0.007), with infection as the main cause. Technique failure and peritonitis were similar in both groups. CONCLUSION:Previous Tx is a risk factor for mortality but not for technique failure or peritonitis in incident patients on a PD program.