Adverse technical events in home hemodialysis

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Adverse technical events in home hemodialysis
المؤلفون: Rose Faratro, Karthik K. Tennankore, Stella Fung, Elizabeth Wong, Christopher T. Chan, Celine D'Gama
المصدر: American journal of kidney diseases : the official journal of the National Kidney Foundation. 65(1)
سنة النشر: 2014
مصطلحات موضوعية: Adult, Male, medicine.medical_specialty, Canada, medicine.medical_treatment, Arteriovenous fistula, Hemodialysis, Home, Severity of Illness Index, Cohort Studies, Arteriovenous Shunt, Surgical, Patient Education as Topic, medicine, Embolism, Air, Humans, Intensive care medicine, Adverse effect, Dialysis, Retrospective Studies, business.industry, Home hemodialysis, Retrospective cohort study, Dialysis catheter, Middle Aged, medicine.disease, Quality Improvement, Prosthesis Failure, Self Care, Nephrology, Cohort, Kidney Failure, Chronic, Female, business, Emergency Service, Hospital, Cohort study
الوصف: Background There is a growing interest in home hemodialysis because of its clinical benefits. However, given that patients are responsible for performing a complex medical procedure at home, adverse-event reporting is important to ensure patient safety. The purpose of this study was to describe adverse technical events in a large cohort of home hemodialysis patients. Study Design Retrospective cohort study. Setting & Participants All consecutive patients undergoing home hemodialysis at a large tertiary-care center from 1999 through 2011 (last follow-up, July 2012). Outcomes Overall rate of adverse technical events and number/rate of severe adverse events (defined as those requiring intervention). Results The cohort consisted of 202 patients with total follow-up of 757 patient-years. The cohort underwent a median of 5 dialysis treatments per week and 8 hours per session. 22 first adverse events and 7 recurrent events were identified. Adverse event rates were 0.049 per arteriovenous fistula access-year, 0.015 per arteriovenous graft access-year, and 0.022 per dialysis catheter access-year. Event rates per 1,000 dialysis treatments were 0.208, 0.068, and 0.087 for arteriovenous fistula, arteriovenous graft, and dialysis catheter access, respectively. Most adverse events were related to needle dislodgement (n=18) or air embolism (n=6). 8 adverse events resulted in emergency department visits and 5 required hospital admission. The rate of severe adverse events was 0.009 per patient-year of home hemodialysis and 0.038 per 1,000 dialysis treatments. Interventions included 3 blood transfusions, 2 catheter changes, 1 use of intravenous fluids, and 1 need for urgent dialysis. Attempts were made to retrain or review the technique in all patients with a first adverse event. Limitations Events that were not severe may have been under-reported by patients. Conclusions Serious adverse technical events in home hemodialysis are relatively rare. Strategies to further prevent these events may include patient retraining and periodic vascular access technique audit.
تدمد: 1523-6838
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::2678b3da75caef19d5806ff90c2bf0d9
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25441436
حقوق: CLOSED
رقم الأكسشن: edsair.doi.dedup.....2678b3da75caef19d5806ff90c2bf0d9
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE