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Dialysis world news


Thane to get five new dialysis centre by August - I am in dna of India

In an effort to strengthen the healthcare system in the city, Thane Municipal Corporation (TMC) will start five new dialysis centre in the city. Authorities say that the new centres will be functional by the month of August.

Dr Ram Kendre, medical officer of health at the TMC, said, "We will install 10 dialysis machines at each centre so there will be a total of 50 dialysis machines. The facility will be free for those below the poverty line. Those below the creamy layer will have to shell out 50% of the total cost, while those above the creamy layer will have to bear the entire expense of the treatment.”

The new units will be opened at CR Wadia dispensary at Tembhi Naka, Lokmanya Tilak dispensary and one centre each at Hirandani Estate, Ghodbunder road and Mumbra.

Dr Vaijayanti Devagekar, medical officer with the TMC-run CRWadia hospital said, "The dialysis centre will be opened on the second floor of our hospital. Since the hospital is centrally located, it will be useful to the patients.”

Talking about the development, Suman Pandey, 45, a local resident, said, "This is a good move as the patients will not have to go to Mumbai to get their dialysis.

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Low, High Potassium Ups Mortality in CKD Patients - Renal and Urology News
March 27, 2015 Low, High Potassium Ups Mortality in CKD Patients - Renal and Urology News
Hypo- and hyperkalemia found to increase death risk by 26% and 22%, respectively.

DALLAS—Low and high serum potassium levels are associated with increased mortality risk in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD), researchers reported at the National Kidney Foundation's 2015 Spring Clinical Meetings.

In a study of 42,912 patients with stage 3 or 4 CKD, Georges N. Nakhoul, MD, and colleagues at Cleveland Clinic found that hypokalemia (potassium levels below 3.5 mmol/L) and hyperkalemia (potassium levels 5.5 mmol/L or above) were associated with a 26% and 22% increased risk of death, respectively, compared with a potassium level of 4.0 – 4.9 mmol/L (reference). The investigators found no association between serum potassium and risk of end-stage renal disease.

The study population, which had a mean age of 72 years, was 54% female and 13% African American. Dr. Nakhoul's group obtained data from their institution's electronic health record-based CKD registry.

The researchers noted that hypokalemia and hyperkalemia have been linked to increased mortality usually as a consequence of the arrhythmogenic effects of potassium.

“The results are not surprising for mortality,” commented Csaba P. Kovesdy, MD, who has conducted research on potassium levels and mortality in patients with renal disease but was not involved in the new study. “But I was surprised that [the researchers] did not find associations with ESRD.”

The study has the advantage of a moderately large study sample and fairly good representation of confounders, said Dr. Kovesdy, Director of the Clinical Outcomes and Clinical Trials Program in the Division of Nephrology at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center in Memphis and Nephrology Section Chief at the Memphis VA Medical Center. 

The study, however, relied on data from a single center, which limits interpretation of study findings. Another limitation is the use of a single baseline serum potassium value, which may or may not represent long-term potassium levels and may not be the best way to evaluate the effects on mortality.

Both higher and lower potassium are known to increase mortality through arrhythmias, for which short-term changes in potassium are most relevant, he pointed out.

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Kidney Patients Living Longer on Dialysis, Study Shows - HealthDay
Kidney Patients Living Longer on Dialysis, Study Shows

FRIDAY, March 27, 2015 (HealthDay News) -- New statistics suggest that kidney patients on dialysis are surviving longer.

"Declining mortality rates are the clearest evidence of improving outcomes in dialysis patients," lead researcher Eric Weinhandl, principal investigator with the Peer Kidney Care Initiative in Minneapolis, said in a news release from the National Kidney Foundation.

"The transition to dialysis is difficult, both physically and psychologically," Weinhandl said. "However, clinical outcomes on dialysis are improving and patient survival is increasing."

Researchers found that death rates fell in dialysis patients who were treated in freestanding facilities. The death rates fell by 15 percent in the first year of treatment in new patients, and by about 19 percent in continuing patients.

Weinhandl said there are probably many reasons for the decline in death rates, including better drug-based management of heart disease, higher vaccination rates and changes in treatment of anemia. The decline also coincided with the advent of new treatment guidelines for kidney disease.

The study was presented Thursday at a National Kidney Foundation meeting in Dallas. Research presented at meetings should be viewed as preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed medical journal.

"It is gratifying to see patients living longer on dialysis," Kerry Willis, chief scientific officer of the National Kidney Foundation, said in the news release. "Improved practice means that people are initiating dialysis in a generally healthier state, which leads to better long-term outcomes for kidney failure patients."

More information

Visit the National Kidney Foundation for more on dialysis.

SOURCE: National Kidney Foundation, news release, March 26, 2015

-- Randy Dotinga

Last Updated: Mar 27, 2015

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Dialysis and Phosphorus: Does Race Matter? - MedPage Today

Action Points

DALLAS -- Socioeconomic status and race and ethnicity were, and were not, found to be correlated with serum phosphorus levels among incident hemodialysis patients, researchers said here.

Two studies presented at the National Kidney Foundation annual meeting, using different methods, came down on opposite sides of the question of whether race is a factor in risk of abnormal phosphorus levels with hemodialysis.

One of the studies, led by Natasha Tilluckdharry, MD, from the Kaiser Permanente health system in California, looked at the phosphorus levels of more than 5,500 patients and found that the unadjusted levels did not differ by race.

And when they adjusted for age, sex, body mass index, and other factors, Hispanic patients on hemodialysis had lower levels than did non-Hispanic whites or Asians (4.33 mg/dL, 95% CI 4.27-4.40 versus 4.54, 95% CI 4.45-4.64 and 4.48, 95% CI 4.43-4.54, respectively, P=0.0005). African Americans had roughly the same level as whites.

In the other study, by Ravi Manglani, MD, at the Lincoln Medical Center in Bronx, N.Y., and colleagues, Hispanics living in the inner-city on hemodialysis had significantly higher phosphorus levels than non-Hispanics regardless of how well they adhered to a diet or responded to phosphate bonding therapy.

Tilluckdharry told MedPage Today that her team had hypothesized that they would, in fact, find a racial association.

"The results were different than what we expected," she said. "But there were no differences in terms of race even though there were marked differences in other aspects."

Those differences were significant at baseline for vitamin D levels, mean serum albumin, mean serum calcium, and median parathyroid hormone.

The cohort studied was selected from an end-stage renal disease (ESRD) database at Kaiser Permanente. All patients had at least one year of membership with the system during the period from January 2007 to June 2013. Nearly 60% of the patients were male.

The mean follow-up was around 2 years and the mean age was 65.8. Serum phosphorus levels were averaged over time. Limitations of the Kaiser study included the reliance on GPS coordinate data for socioeconomic status data. There was also a lack of information about the type of phosphate binder used, adherence rate to medication, and diet.

Hispanic Ethnicity a Factor?

In the Bronx study, data were gathered on 88 patients with end-stage renal disease. Hispanics with poor diet adherence had higher levels of phosphorus than did non-Hispanics (6.82 versus 6.19, 95% CI 6.64-7.00 and 95% CI 5.96-6.42; P=0.0009).

In addition, Hispanics with good diet adherence had higher phosphorus levels (4.87 versus 4.65; P=0.0064) as did those with good adherence to phosphate binding therapy (5.11 versus 4.78; P=0.0003) and those with poor adherence to therapy (7.00 versus 6.37; P=0.0029). The measurements were taken over a 2-year period, ending in December 2012. All patients had been on dialysis for at least a year.

"We need to increase awareness among physicians that phosphorous levels need to be aggressively managed among the Hispanic population, because there's evidence that higher phosphorus levels lead to a higher morbidity and mortality for dialysis patients," Manglani told MedPage Today. "Whether it's more emphasis on diet restrictions or more aggressive phosphate binding therapy, it could be a big help."

But Tilluckdharry said -- for those in the Kaiser system, at least -- there was no need to change existing treatments. One possible reason for the different findings was the nature of Kaiser's system and those who use it, she said.

"Our population is a little bit different because they're in a managed care system," Tilluckdharry said. "Your access to dietitians, your access to social workers, your access to medication, is pretty standard, regardless of race or socioeconomic status."

One of the goals of the Kaiser study was to figure out who to target. But, said Tilluckdharry, given the results there was no good reason to change clinical practice and target specific populations.

Researchers disclosed no relevant relationships with industry.

  • Reviewed by F. Perry Wilson, MD, MSCE Assistant Professor, Section of Nephrology, Yale School of Medicine and Dorothy Caputo, MA, BSN, RN, Nurse Planner

last updated 03.27.2015

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Sunitinib May Be Acceptable First Line Treatment for Metastatic Renal Cell ... - Cancer Therapy Advisor
March 27, 2015 Sunitinib represents an acceptable option in first line treatment for mPRCC.
Sunitinib represents an acceptable option in first line treatment for mPRCC.

Sunitinib represents an acceptable option in first line treatment for metastatic papillary renal cell carcinoma (mPRCC), a recent study published early online in the journal Annals of Oncology has shown.

Because there is currently no standard first line treatment for mPRCC, researchers designed a prospective phase II study to evaluate sunitinib in first line treatment of patients with mPRCC.

Researchers enrolled 15 patients with type 1 and 46 patients with type 2 mPRCC. Of those, 12 were in the favorable risk group, 33 were in the intermediate risk group, 9 were in the poor risk group, and 7 were undetermined.

Results showed that at a median follow-up time of 51.4 months, 13% (95% CI: 0.1 - 30.5) of those with type mPRCC achieved a partial response, 67% had stable disease with 33% of patients having stable disease at least 12 weeks.

For those with type 2, 11% (95% CI: 1.9 - 20.3) achieved a partial response, 54% had stable disease with 22% of patients having stable disease at least 12 weeks.

RELATED: Urine Test for Kidney Cancer Showing Promise

Median progression-free survival was 6.6 months (95% CI: 2.8 - 14.8) and 5.5 months (95% CI: 3.8 - 7.1) for type 1 and type 2, respectively. Median overall survival was 17.8 months (95% CI: 5.7 - 26.1) for type 1 and 12.4 months (95% CI: 8.2 - 14.3).

The findings suggest that sunitinib shows activity in both types of mPRCC, but lower activity than in clear cell metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC).

Reference

  1. Ravaud A, Oudard S, De Fromont M, et al. First-line treatment with sunitinib for type 1 and type 2 locally advanced or metastatic papillary renal cell carcinoma: a phase II study (SUPAP) by the French Genitourinary Group (GETUG). Ann Oncol. 2015. doi: 10.1093/annonc/mdv149.

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