Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2021
MO782VASCULAR ACCESS IN ELDERLY PATIENTS
Abstract
\n \n \n The arteriovenous fistula (AVF) continues to be the first-line vascular access (AV) in the hemodialysis population. However, it is disputed whether the profitability and survival in the elderly patient are the same as in the younger patient. Thus, there are authors who propose the tunnelled catheter as the best option in this group of patients. The objective of this study was to analyze the characteristics of vascular access in incident patients over 80 years of age at our center.\n \n \n \n A retrospective analysis was performed included incident hemodialysis patients >80 years between 2017-2020. Epidemiological and vascular access complications related, as well as first permanent vascular access survival were analysed. A Pearson s correlation coefficients were employed to determine the correlation between the exitus and other variables and Regression models of mixed effects of covariance (ANCOVAs) were created to determine the effect of these with the exitus.\n \n \n \n Demographic characteristics of forty-four patients included are shown in Table 1. Significant differences in sex and comorbidities (diabetes, ischemic heart disease, peripheral vascular disease and hypertension) were found. A total of 26 patients (62%) had a fistula at the time of beginning hemodialysis, all of them with pre-surgical mapping and monitoring, only 15 (34%) of them being working. The most prevalent type of vascular access (VA) was the left humerus-cephalic (21%). 12 (27%) patients were exitus during the 36 months after the beginning of hemodialysis, with significant differences between groups. The variables catheter, male, and type of VA showed a significant correlation with the exitus (-0.345, -0.347, -0.347 and -0.309 respectively). The multivariate analysis showed a significant association between gender and catheter as vascular access at the beginning of hemodialysis with the exitus (p<0.05) even after being adjusted for age and AVF.\n \n \n \n In our population, male sex and catheter at the beginning of hemodialysis have a significant association with exitus. AVF should be considered as the first choice vascular access even in the subgroup of patients over 80 years old\n