Litcius/Paper detail

The benefit of early survival on PD versus HD—Why this is (still) very important

Mark R. Marshall

2020Peritoneal Dialysis International35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

There are a number of misconceptions around the identified early survival benefit of peritoneal dialysis (PD) relative to hemodialysis (HD), including that such benefits "even out in the end" since the relative risk of death over time eventually encompasses 1.0 (or even an estimate that is unfavorable to PD); that the early benefit is, in fact, most likely due to unmeasured confounding; and such benefits are only due to the influence of central venous catheters and "crash starters" in the HD group. In fact, the early survival benefit results in a substantial gain of patient life years in PD cohorts relative to HD ones, even if it the benefit appears to "even out in the end," is relatively insensitive to unmeasured confounding, and persists even when the effects of central venous catheters are accounted for. In this review, the calculations and arguments are made to support these tenets. Survival on dialysis is still one of the most important considerations for all stakeholders in the end-stage kidney disease community, including patients who rank it among their top priorities. Shared decision-making is a fundamental patient right and requires both balanced information and an iterative mechanism for a consensual decision based on shared understanding and purpose. A cornerstone of this process should be an explicit discussion of the early survival benefit of PD relative to HD.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePeritoneal dialysisIntensive care medicineDialysisHemodialysisConfoundingRelative survivalRelative riskEnd stage renal diseaseDiseaseSurgeryCancerInternal medicineConfidence intervalCancer registryDialysis and Renal Disease ManagementCentral Venous Catheters and HemodialysisHealth Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of Life