医学
腹膜透析
重症监护医学
心理干预
透析
肾移植
肾脏替代疗法
血液透析
流行病学
生活质量(医疗保健)
移植
内科学
护理部
作者
Aminu K. Bello,Ikechi G. Okpechi,Mohamed A. Osman,Yeoungjee Cho,Brett Cullis,Htay Htay,Vivekanand Jha,Muhammad Makusidi,Mignon McCulloch,Nikhil Shah,Marina Wainstein,David W. Johnson
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41581-022-00623-7
摘要
Peritoneal dialysis (PD) is an important home-based treatment for kidney failure and accounts for 11% of all dialysis and 9% of all kidney replacement therapy globally. Although PD is available in 81% of countries, this provision ranges from 96% in high-income countries to 32% in low-income countries. Compared with haemodialysis, PD has numerous potential advantages, including a simpler technique, greater feasibility of use in remote communities, generally lower cost, lesser need for trained staff, fewer management challenges during natural disasters, possibly better survival in the first few years, greater ability to travel, fewer dietary restrictions, better preservation of residual kidney function, greater treatment satisfaction, better quality of life, better outcomes following subsequent kidney transplantation, delayed need for vascular access (especially in small children), reduced need for erythropoiesis-stimulating agents, and lower risk of blood-borne virus infections and of SARS-CoV-2 infection. PD outcomes have been improving over time but with great variability, driven by individual and system-level inequities and by centre effects; this variation is exacerbated by a lack of standardized outcome definitions. Potential strategies for outcome improvement include enhanced standardization, monitoring and reporting of PD outcomes, and the implementation of continuous quality improvement programmes and of PD-specific interventions, such as incremental PD, the use of biocompatible PD solutions and remote PD monitoring.
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