Background and objectives: The study aim was to establish the incidence and characterize all encapsulating peritoneal sclerosis (EPS) cases in patients treated by peritoneal dialysis (PD).Design Conclusions: The incidence reported in this study may be used to inform patients of the minimum risk of developing EPS on PD.
The data support a positive association between gadolinium-based contrast agent administration and development of nephrogenic systemic fibrosis in the established renal failure population; in addition, there is a positive association between cumulative dose of gadodiamide used and dosing events.
This study provides support for the feasibility of a "new style" ERA-EDTA registry and the collection of data is now being extended to other countries. The improvement in patient survival over the last two decades has been much greater in transplant recipients than in dialysis patients.
RRT incidence continues to rise but at various rates in the European countries studied, tending to widen the gap between them. This mainly results from enlarging differences in incidence in the elderly and, to a lesser extent, in that due to diabetes, hypertension and renal vascular disease.
An evidence based clinical guideline for the diagnosis and management of Paget’s disease of Bone (PDB) was developed using GRADE methodology, by a Guideline Development Group (GDG) led by the Paget’s Association (UK). A systematic review of diagnostic tests, pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatment options was conducted which sought to address several key questions of clinical relevance. Twelve recommendations and five conditional recommendations were made but there was insufficient evidence to address eight of the questions posed. The following recommendations were identified as the most important. Radionuclide bone scans, in addition to targeted radiographs, are recommended as a means of fully and accurately defining the extent of the metabolically active disease in patients with PDB.Serum total alkaline phosphatase (ALP) is recommended as a first line biochemical screening test in combination with liver function tests in screening for the presence of metabolically active PDB.Bisphosphonates are recommended for the treatment of bone pain associated with Paget’s disease. Zoledronic acid is recommended as the bisphosphonate most likely to give a favourable pain response.Treatment aimed at improving symptoms is recommended over a treat-to-target strategy aimed at normalising total ALP in PDB.Total hip or knee replacements are recommended for patients with PDB who develop osteoarthritis in whom medical treatment is inadequate. There is insufficient information to recommend one type of surgical approach over another.
The guideline was endorsed by the European Calcified Tissues Society, the International Osteoporosis Foundation, the American Society of Bone and Mineral Research, the Bone research Society (UK) and the British Geriatric Society. The GDG noted that there had been a lack of research on patient-focused clinical outcomes in PDB and identified several areas where further research was needed.
Abstract. There is a trend to start dialysis earlier in patients with chronic renal failure. Studies that suggest improved survival from earlier initiation of dialysis are flawed in that they have measured survival from start of dialysis rather than from a time point before dialysis, when patients have the same renal function. This flaw is termed lead-time bias. Using the electronic patient record at the renal unit of Glasgow Royal Infirmary, all patients were identified who had received dialysis for chronic renal failure and who had sufficient data to calculate the time point at which they reached an estimated creatinine clearance (eC Cr ) of 20 ml/min (n ϭ 275). This date was used to time survival. The patients were divided into early and late start groups by the median eC Cr for all patients at initiation of dialysis, which was 8.3 ml/min. There was no significant benefit in patient survival from earlier initiation of dialysis. A Cox proportional hazards model demonstrated a significant inverse relationship between eC Cr at start of dialysis and survival (hazard ratio, 1
This large national PD cohort met targets for peritonitis rates every year during the 8 years covered by the present report, but showed no consistent trend for improvement. Peritonitis remains the main cause of technique failure in Scotland. Peritonitis rates varied widely between the units, which suggests that we should look to the units and countries with lower peritonitis rates to see if we can adopt successful elements of their practice before resigning ourselves to our ongoing peritonitis burden.
This European study shows that the annual rise of the overall incidence rate of RRT for ESRD has diminished and that in several age groups the incidence rates have now stabilized. The survival of dialysis patients and kidney transplant recipients has continued to improve.
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