Journal of the American Medical Directors Association | 2019

Factors Associated With Withdrawal From Dialysis Therapy in Incident Hemodialysis Patients Aged 80 Years or Older.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


OBJECTIVES\nAmong kidney disease patients ≥80 years progressing to end-stage renal disease, there is growing interest in conservative nondialytic management approaches. However, among those who have initiated hemodialysis, little is known about the impact of withdrawal from dialysis on mortality, nor the patient characteristics associated with withdrawal from dialysis.\n\n\nSTUDY DESIGN\nHistorical cohort study.\n\n\nSETTING AND PARTICIPANTS\nWe examined 133,162 incident hemodialysis patients receiving care within a large national dialysis organization from 2007 to\xa02011.\n\n\nMEASURES\nWe identified patients who withdrew from dialysis, either as a listed cause of death or censor reason. Incidence rates and subdistribution hazard ratios for withdrawal from dialysis as well as 4 other censoring reasons were examined across age groups. In addition, demographic and clinical characteristics associated with withdrawal from dialysis therapy among patients ≥80\xa0years old was assessed using logistic regression analysis.\n\n\nRESULTS\nAmong 17,296 patients aged ≥80 years, 10% of patients withdrew from dialysis. Duration from the last hemodialysis treatment to death was 10 [interquartile range 6-16] days in patients with available data. Withdrawal from dialysis was the second and third most common cause of death among patients aged ≥80 years and <80 years, respectively. Among patients ≥80 years, minorities were much less likely than non-Hispanic whites to stop dialysis. Other factors associated with higher odds of dialysis withdrawal included having a central venous catheter compared to an arteriovenous fistula at dialysis start, dementia, living in mid-west regions, and less favorable markers associated with malnutrition-inflammation-cachexia syndrome such as higher white blood cell counts and lower body mass index, albumin, and normalized protein catabolic rate.\n\n\nCONCLUSION/IMPLICATIONS\nAmong very-elderly incident hemodialysis patients, dialysis therapy withdrawal exhibits wide variations across age, race and ethnicity, regions, cognitive status, dialysis vascular access, and nutritional status. Further studies examining implications of withdrawal from dialysis in older patients are warranted.

Volume 20 6
Pages \n 743-750.e1\n
DOI 10.1016/j.jamda.2018.11.030
Language English
Journal Journal of the American Medical Directors Association

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