Surface-Area-Normalized Kt/V: A Method of Rescaling Dialysis Dose to Body Surface Area-Implications for Different-Size Patients by Gender

被引:46
作者
Daugirdas, John T. [1 ]
Depner, Thomas A. [2 ]
Greene, Tom [3 ]
Kuhlmann, Martin K. [4 ]
Levin, Nathan W. [5 ]
Chertow, Glenn M. [6 ]
Rocco, Michael V. [7 ]
机构
[1] Univ Illinois, Burr Ridge, IL 60527 USA
[2] Univ Calif Davis, Davis, CA 95616 USA
[3] Univ Utah, Salt Lake City, UT USA
[4] Klinikum Friedrichshain, Berlin, Germany
[5] Renal Res Inst, New York, NY USA
[6] Stanford Univ, Stamford, CT USA
[7] Wake Forest Univ, Winston Salem, NC 27109 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1111/j.1525-139X.2008.00482.x
中图分类号
R5 [内科学]; R69 [泌尿科学(泌尿生殖系疾病)];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Dialysis is measured as Kt/V, which scales the (lose (Kt) to body water content (V). Scaling dialysis dose to body surface area (S-dub) has been advocated. but the implications of such rescaling have not been examined. We developed a method of rescaling measured Kt/V to S-dub and Studied the effect of such alternative scaling oil the minimum adequacy Values that Might then be applied in male and female patients of varying body size. We examined anthropometric estimates of V and S (Watson vs. Dubois estimates) in 1765 patients enrolled in the HEMO study after excluding patients with amputations. An S-normalized target stdKt/V was defined, and an adequacy ratio (R) was computed for each patient as R = DIN where D = delivered stdKt/V (calculated using the Gotch-Leypoldt equation for stdKt/V) and N = the S-normalized minimum target value. In the HEMO data set, we determined the extent to which baseline (prerandomization) stdKt/V values would have exceeded such an S-based minimum target stdKt/V. The median V-wat/S-dub ratios were significantly higher in men (2134) than in women (18.50). The average of these (20) was used to normalize the Current suggested minimally adequate value (stdKt/V >= 2.0/week) to the S-normalized target value (stdKt/S >= 40 L/M-2), assuming that average modeled V = average anthropometric V. To achieve this S-normalized target, the required single-pool (sp) Kt/V was always hi-her in women than in men at any level of body size. For small patients (V-wat = 25L), required stdKt/V values were 2.05 and 2.21/week for men and women. respectively, corresponding to spKt/V values of 1.31 and 1.52/session. On the other hand, large (V-wat = 50L) male patients would need spKt/V values of only 1.0/session. Prerandomization baseline dialysis sessions in the HEMO Study were found to meet such a new S-based standard in almost all (766/773) men and in 885/992 women. An analysis of scaling dose to anthropometrically estimated liver size (L) showed similar gender ratios for for V-wat:L and V-wat:S-dub providing a potential physiologic explanation underpinning S-based scaling. S-based scaling of the dialysis dose Would require considerably higher doses in small patients and in women, and Would allow somewhat lower doses in larger male patients. Current dialysis practice would largely meet such an S-based adequacy standard if the dose were normalized to a V-wat:S-dub ratio of 20.
引用
收藏
页码:415 / 421
页数:7
相关论文
共 12 条
[1]   Estimation of liver size for liver transplantation:: The impact of age and gender [J].
Choukèr, A ;
Martignoni, A ;
Dugas, M ;
Eisenmenger, W ;
Schauer, R ;
Kaufmann, I ;
Schelling, G ;
Löhe, F ;
Jauch, KW ;
Peter, K ;
Thiel, M .
LIVER TRANSPLANTATION, 2004, 10 (05) :678-685
[2]   Anthropometrically estimated total body water volumes are larger than modeled urea volume in chronic hemodialysis patients: Effects of age, race, and gender [J].
Daugirdas, JT ;
Greene, T ;
Depner, TA ;
Chumlea, C ;
Rocco, MJ ;
Chertow, GM .
KIDNEY INTERNATIONAL, 2003, 64 (03) :1108-1119
[3]  
DAUGIRDES JT, 2008, SEMIN DIALYSIS, P377
[4]  
DEPNER TA, 2008, ASN ABSTR IN PRESS
[5]   A formula to estimate the approximate surface area if height and weight be known [J].
Du Bois, D ;
Du Bois, EF .
ARCHIVES OF INTERNAL MEDICINE, 1916, 17 (06) :863-871
[6]   Organ-tissue mass measurement allows modeling of REE and metabolically active tissue mass [J].
Gallagher, D ;
Belmonte, D ;
Deurenberg, P ;
Wang, ZM ;
Krasnow, N ;
Pi-Sunyer, FX ;
Heymsfield, SB .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-ENDOCRINOLOGY AND METABOLISM, 1998, 275 (02) :E249-E258
[7]   Association of achieved dialysis dose with mortality in the Hemodialysis Study: An example of "dose-targeting bias" [J].
Greene, T ;
Daugirdas, J ;
Depner, T ;
Allon, M ;
Beck, G ;
Chumlea, C ;
Delmez, J ;
Gotch, F ;
Kusek, JW ;
Levin, N ;
Owen, W ;
Schulman, G ;
Star, R ;
Toto, R ;
Eknoyan, G .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEPHROLOGY, 2005, 16 (11) :3371-3380
[8]   Standard liver volume in the Caucasian population [J].
Heinemann, A ;
Wischhusen, F ;
Püschel, K ;
Rogiers, X .
LIVER TRANSPLANTATION AND SURGERY, 1999, 5 (05) :366-368
[9]  
Morton AR, 2007, SEMIN DIALYSIS, V20, P12
[10]   High dialysis dose is associated with lower mortality among women but not among men [J].
Port, FK ;
Wolfe, RA ;
Hulbert-Shearon, TE ;
McCullough, KP ;
Ashby, VB ;
Held, PJ .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF KIDNEY DISEASES, 2004, 43 (06) :1014-1023