Little is known about survival and hospitalization among alternative-regimen hemodialysis (HD) users compared to thrice-weekly conventional HD patients who have similar characteristics and medical histories. We conducted a cohort study of alternative-regimen HD users and propensity score (PS)-matched controls. Collaborating clinicians identified 101 patients in their programs who used nocturnal HD (NHD) and 44 patients who used short daily HD (SDHD) for 60 days or more. Ten PS-matched control patients for each NHD and SDHD patient were identified from the United States Renal Data System database. Primary outcomes were risk for all-cause mortality and risk for the composite outcome of mortality or major morbid event (AMI or stroke), investigated in Cox proportional hazards models. Risks for all-cause, cardiovascular-related, infection-related, and vascular access-related hospital admissions were also explored. NHD was associated with reduced mortality risk (HR 0.34; 95% CI, 0.21-0.58; P < 0.0001) and with reduced risk for mortality or major morbid event (HR 0.49; 95% CI, 0.31-0.78; P = 0.003) compared to controls. There was a reduced but non-significant risk of death for patients using SDHD compared to controls (HR 0.61; 95% CI, 0.30-1.24; P = 0.17). All-cause and specific hospitalizations did not differ significantly between NHD and SDHD patients and their matched control cohorts. This study provides additional evidence that NHD may improve patient survival.
Survival of patients on short daily haemodialysis was 2-3 times better than that of matched three times weekly haemodialysis patients reported by the USRDS.
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