Abstract
Introduction
Therapy alerts during automated peritoneal dialysis (APD) can cause significant disruptions to patients’ sleep and quality of life and may portend poorer outcomes. Understanding the relationship between alert frequency during this early period and longer-term PD outcomes is important.
Methods
Following the probabilistic linkage of Vantive's Sharesource database to the Australian and New Zealand Dialysis and Transplant (ANZDATA) Registry, we examined the relationship between alert frequency in the first 30 days of APD and PD discontinuation. We included adult patients in Australia and New Zealand who commenced APD with the Vantive Homechoice Claria cycler over 2019–2023 and continued for at least 30 days. The average alerts per treatment in the first 30 days were divided into quartiles and time to PD discontinuation (inclusive of HD transfer and death), HD transfer only, and infective and non-infective HD transfer were modelled as outcomes.
Results
The cohort was 1880 patients, 65% male, and median age at PD commencement of 58 years. Overall PD continuation at 1,2, and 3 years was 78%, 56% and 41%, with HD transfer rates at 14%, 23% and 27%. Higher rates of HD transfer in the first 12 months were seen in the groups with a higher average alert number. Within 12 months, there was a progressive risk of non-infective HD transfer with increasing 30-day alert quartile.
Conclusion
Alert burden in the first 30 days is a risk factor for HD transfer in the first 12 months, and resolving underlying issues early may help to improve PD continuation.
Keywords
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Supplementary Material
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