Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03100188

Designer Dialysis Peritoneal Dialysis

Designer Dialysis: Designing a Peritoneal Dialysis Prescription That Fits a Patient's Lifestyle

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
7 (actual)
Sponsor
Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center in New Orleans · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This study aims to use modified peritoneal dialysis prescriptions to achieve adequate clearance and volume removal while decreasing the number of exchanges or time spent on dialysis, evaluating maintenance of residual renal function, and improving quality of life.

Detailed description

Patient's currently on peritoneal dialysis at our program can be considered for this study. In order to be enrolled, patients patient's must have significant residual renal function defined as a renal Kt/V \>1.0. These patients will then be consented, and if agreeable, the participant's dialysis prescriptions will be modified to decrease their peritoneal dialysis. For patients on continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD), this may mean less exchanges in a 24 hour period, or less exchanges over the course of the week (does not need to perform exchanges every day). Patients who are continuous cycler peritoneal dialysis (CCPD) will be modified to shorter cycler times, or also less cycles during the course of the week (does not need cycler therapy every day). Patients will need to continue achieving adequate weekly total Kt/V of greater than or equal to 1.7 as per national recommendations and the clinical guidelines within our unit. This is calculated using the residual renal (RR) Kt/v and the PD Kt/V. Patients will also perform monthly 24 hour urine collections for urinary volume, creatinine clearance, and urea clearance. Adequacy is typically measured every 3 months based on our internal lab requirements, but patients will need to perform adequacy measurements any time their prescription is changed. The investigators will measure monthly labs per routine including albumin, parathyroid hormone (PTH), serum phosphorus, and hemoglobin. The investigators hypothesize that patients will have a better quality of life (QoL) while on a modified dialysis prescription with less exchanges or less cycler time as assessed by the kidney disease quality of life (KDQOL-36) survey tool. The investigators believe that patients with higher levels of residual renal function (≥ 2 mL/min) can perform fewer peritoneal dialysis exchanges while still achieving and maintaining adequate clearance of solute and appropriate volume removal. The investigators also believe that by maximizing the use of the residual renal function, the investigators can adjust the peritoneal dialysis prescription by decreasing the numbers of manual exchanges per day, decreasing cycler time, or possibly decreasing the number of days of dialysis each week. With the benefit of less dialysis time or exchanges per day, the investigators believe patients will have a decreased "burnout" rate by allowing them to have a better QoL and not feel burdened by the dialysis therapy.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERmodified PD prescriptionFor patients on CAPD, fewer daily exchanges or fewer total weekly exchanges are prescribed. Patients on CCPD are prescribed shorter cycler time or fewer total cycles during the week.

Timeline

Start date
2015-07-01
Primary completion
2016-09-30
Completion
2016-12-15
First posted
2017-04-04
Last updated
2017-04-04

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03100188. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.