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A fast peritoneal solute transfer rate (PSTR) has been linked to worse survival especially in continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (PD) cohort. In more recent cohorts, where automated PD and icodextrin were more widely used, this association disappears. The current study intended to clarify whether fast PSTR is related to worse outcome in this single center cohort with minimal use of APD and no icodextrin and otherwise modern management practice. Our study found that baseline PSTR predicted patient outcome in univariate survival analysis but not in multivariate analysis. The relationship between comorbidity and faster baseline PSTR may partly explain it.
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| original cohort | In the original cohort, 314 patients had catheter implantation between 1st Jan, 2005 to 31st Dec 2009. 269 patients started PD and followed up in our center. 26 patients were excluded due to missing baseline peritoneal membrane function data. 243 patients (n=243, age 53.2±16.3 year) entered the analysis. | ||
| validation cohort | The validation cohort started PD from 2015 to 2018. It was originally designed for a 12 month observational study around fluid balance. 187 patients were in the validation cohort (age 53.0±15.9 year). |
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| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| The relationship between fast PSTR and worse outcome in PD. | Baseline PSTR predicted patient outcome in univariate survival analysis but not in multivariate analysis. The relationship between comorbidity and faster baseline PSTR may partly explain it. | The data collection time period of the study is over 10 years. |
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Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
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Both gender, end stage renal disease on PD treatment
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