1 / 12

DOPPS Background

Trends from the Dialysis Outcomes Practice Patterns Study-DOPPS in Vascular Access Use in Haemodialysis. Anna Marti Monros , Ronald L Pissoni , Douglas S. Fuller, Joan Fort, Francesco Locatelli , Lawrence Spergel , David Goodkin , Hal Morgenstern, Friedrich K Port.

camila
Télécharger la présentation

DOPPS Background

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. Trends from the Dialysis Outcomes Practice Patterns Study-DOPPS in Vascular Access Use in Haemodialysis. Anna Marti Monros, Ronald L Pissoni, Douglas S. Fuller, Joan Fort, Francesco Locatelli, Lawrence Spergel, David Goodkin, Hal Morgenstern, Friedrich K Port.

  2. DOPPS Background • DOPPS is an international prospective study of hemodialysis practices and patient outcomes. • DOPPS uses random sampling of facilities & patients to provide nationally representative statistics. • Data collected at >300 dialysis units across 12 countries in 4 study phases since 1996. • Here we report country trends in vascular access use from 3 cross-sections of HD patients in each country (N=27,145) from 2002-2010.

  3. VA Use inCountries with Decreasing Fistula Use & Increasing Catheter Use Prevalent cross-sections of patients on dialysis >90 days at time of study entry; weighted by facility sampling fraction; DOPPS 2 (2002-2004), DOPPS 3 (2005-2008), DOPPS 4 (2009-2011)

  4. Distribution of VA Types inCountries with Stable or Increasing Fistula Use Prevalent cross-sections of patients on dialysis >90 days at time of study entry; weighted by facility sampling fraction; DOPPS 2 (2002-2004), DOPPS 3 (2005-2008), DOPPS 4 (2009-2011);

  5. Trend Towards Greater Catheter Use Seen Even in Younger Patients in Some Countries • − Age 18-69 − Prevalent cross-sections of patients on dialysis >90 days at time of study entry; weighted by facility sampling fraction; DOPPS 2 (2002-2004), DOPPS 3 (2005-2008), DOPPS 4 (2009-2011)

  6. Trend Towards Greater Catheter Use Seen Even in Non-diabetic Younger Patients • − Age 18-69, without diabetes − Prevalent cross-sections of patients on dialysis >90 days at time of study entry; weighted by facility sampling fraction; DOPPS 2 (2002-2004), DOPPS 3 (2005-2008), DOPPS 4 (2009-2011)

  7. DOPPS 4: Some Countries Show Small Differences in VA Use in Older vs Younger Pts Prevalent cross-sections of patients on dialysis >90 days at time of study entry; weighted by facility sampling fraction; DOPPS 2 (2002-2004), DOPPS 3 (2005-2008), DOPPS 4 (2009-2011)

  8. Summary (I) • In DOPPS, Japan has consistently displayed the highest AV fistula (AVF) use [92-93%, since 2002], with <2% of pts using a catheter • The US, led by the Fistula First Initiative, has shown the largest % rise in AVF use from 34% in 2002 to 60% by 2010 • AVF use increased in Aus-NZ and the UK to 78% and 74%, respectively, while remaining at ~80% in France • Catheter use has either remained stable or declined in Japan, France, UK and US

  9. Summary (II) • In other countries, catheter use has increased substantially from 2002-2010: • to 49% and 39% catheter use in Canada and Belgium • >2-fold rise to 20-24% in Italy and Spain • doubling in Germany to 12% • Shifts from AVF to catheter were seen in Belgium, Canada, Italy, Spain, and Germany even among non-diabetic 18-69 yr old pts indicating that these trends extend even to younger pts

  10. Conclusions • Substantial changes in VA use have been seen across some countries during the last decade • In some nations, VA improvement programs have resulted in increases in AVF use • Concerns are raised by the large rises in CATH use in some countries even among younger pts with lower comorbidity burden • Greater CATH use has been linked with higher mortality; future analyses will evaluate changes in practices with changes in clinical outcomes

  11. Acknowledgements • Our thanks to DOPPS study coordinators, medical directors, and participating patients for their dedicated contributions to DOPPS. • The DOPPS would not be possible without the generous financial support of the following companies for their strong commitment to independent scientific research to improve patient care: • Amgen (since 1996) • Kyowa Hakko Kirin (since 1999, in Japan) • Abbott Laboratories (since 2009) • Sanofi Renal (since 2009) • Baxter Healthcare (since 2011) • Vifor Fresenius Medical Care Renal Pharma Ltd (since 2011) • Support from DOPPS sponsors is provided without restrictions on publications.

  12. Thanks.

More Related