1 / 11

Chronic Uremic Acidosis

Chronic Uremic Acidosis. Nutritional Effects 2 Hypoalbuminemia Osteomalacia (bone mineral loss) Decreased muscle mass Increased incidence of morbidity and mortality. 2 Blair, D, et al., “Nutritional Effects of Delivered Bicarbonate Dose in Maintenance Hemodialysis Patients”,

quanda
Télécharger la présentation

Chronic Uremic Acidosis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chronic Uremic Acidosis Nutritional Effects2 • Hypoalbuminemia • Osteomalacia (bone mineral loss) • Decreased muscle mass • Increased incidence of morbidity and mortality 2 Blair, D, et al., “Nutritional Effects of Delivered Bicarbonate Dose in Maintenance Hemodialysis Patients”, Journal of Renal Nutrition, 2003 Vol 13; 205-211

  2. 2004 RETROSPECTIVE STUDY Conversion to Acid Concentrate with Additional Acetate GranuFlo is a dry acid concentrate product that contains 8 mEq/L of acetate. This effectively increases the “total buffer” by 4 mEq/L over what the patient saw when liquid acid concentrate was used.

  3. Prevalence of Acidosis among Dialysis Patients

  4. FMCNA Steps in Reducing Acidosis • Medical Director memorandum (2000) to raise awareness among physicians. • Bicarbonate goal added to Quality Reports (Jan 2001) to provide feedback to dialysis facilities. • Dry acid w/ Diacetate made available (2002).

  5. Study Design • Retrospective of patients converted to dry acid concentrate between August 2002 and April 2003. • Determine pre-conversion 3-month average pre-dialysis serum bicarbonate. • Exclude labs during 60 day washout period. • Determine post-washout 3-month average pre-dialysis serum bicarbonate. • - Total 4,793 patients with Standard Dialysate and GranuFlo Diacetate data.

  6. Desired Range N = 4,793

  7. Desired Range N = 4,793

  8. Desired Range N = 4,793 Acidosis Concern < 20 mEq/l Alkalosis Concern > 30 mEq/l

  9. Pre-Dialysis Serum Bicarbonate Before and After Conversion to GranuFlo

  10. 2003 Death Risk vs. Bicarbonate Notes: Case mix adjustment accounts for the differences in age, gender, race and diabetes among bicarbonate groups. Because bicarbonate values are inversely correlated with adequate diet, lab (albumin) adjustment is necessary to separate out the nutritional effect. After case mix and lab adjustment, death risk is statistically different from the reference only in the lowest (<=16 meq/l) group (21% higher risk, p=0.0078) and highest (>28 meq/l) group (13% higher risk, p=0.044) Increase Total Buffer Monitor Labs May Require Rx Change Decrease Total Buffer N = 74,089 * Statistically significant at p=0.05

  11. Conclusions • Diacetate resulted in a one-third reduction (15% to 10%) in the prevalence of acidosis, defined as pre-dialysis bicarbonate < 20 mEq/l. • At the same time, the prevalence of alkalosis (pre-dialysis bicarbonate levels >30 mEq/l) rose only slightly, from 0.9% to 1.5%. • Care should be taken to lower dialysate bicarbonate prescriptions in patients whose bicarbonate value rises too high after switching to a dry dialysate w/Diacetate.

More Related