Cognitive Impairment Clinical Trial
Official title:
Evaluation of the Effect of Cooled Haemodialysis on Cognitive Function in Patients Suffering With End-stage Kidney Disease: Feasibility Study
The Investigators aim to perform a feasibility study that will inform the development of a definitive, fully powered, randomised, controlled clinical trial in the future. The main hypothesis that would be tested in this future trial is that patients treated with regular conventional haemodialysis will have a lesser decline in cognitive function and a better quality of life over one year by using cooler dialysis fluid at 35°C, versus a standard dialysis fluid temperature of 36.5°C. This also should reflect in improvements in their abilities for activities of daily living and therefore, reduce carers' burden. If successful the treatment could be universally applied at no extra cost.
Patients with End-Stage Kidney Disease (ESKD) need haemodialysis to remove excess toxins and
fluid from the body and maintain life. They also must restrict their fluid intake, take a
median of 19 medications and follow a special diet1. In the UK, 26 000 patients receive
haemodialysis at a hospital three times a week for around 4 hours at a yearly cost of £636
million. The numbers needing haemodialysis are rising by 7% per year due to an increase in
ageing, diabetes, obesity and hypertension. The best form of treatment for kidney failure is
kidney transplantation, but there is a shortage of organ donors with older people being least
likely to receive a kidney transplant. The average age of dialysis patients in the UK is 65
with 4-year survival expectancy less than 40% - which is worse than for most cancers. The
three most common causes of death are cardiovascular disease, infections and cancer with the
greatest mortality in the first three months of starting dialysis. Haemodialysis is a huge
burden for patients and their family or carers. Most endure unpleasant dialysis-related
symptoms and reduced quality-of-life with high rates of depression, cognitive impairment,
hospital admissions and social isolation. Unsurprisingly, dialysis patients value
quality-of-life more than life expectancy. Several medications currently used at considerable
cost to improve survival and quality-of-life have shown no benefit.
High rates of cognitive impairment in dialysis patients are poorly understood Increasing
severity of Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) is associated with a graded increase in prevalence
of cognitive impairment and decrease in brain perfusion independent of vascular risk factors.
Diagnostic methods vary but recent reviews summarise at least moderate cognitive impairment
in 30-70% of dialysis patients. Cognitive impairment in haemodialysis patients is
independently associated with higher rates of depression and mortality. To date, no
interventions are proven to slow cognitive decline and this poorly understood association was
recently reviewed. Co-segregation of atherosclerotic risk factors, cannot entirely account
for excess risk. There are multiple factors CKD and haemodialysis specific factors including
oxidative stress, malnutrition and inflammation. Haemodialysis allows accumulation of several
neurotoxins that reduce brain perfusion and blood-brain barrier integrity.
Intradialytic hypotension is implicated in excessive cognitive impairment Haemodialysis
involves cycles of removing varying volumes of fluid, electrolytes and toxins that accumulate
between treatments. Hypotension partially results from fluid removal rates exceeding plasma
refill rates. Ubiquitous left ventricular hypertrophy and aortic stiffness further lower the
threshold for haemodialysis to inflict recurrent multi-organ ischemia-reperfusion injury.
Haemodialysis might cause worsening of cognitive impairment by inducing haemodynamic
instability, fluid shifts, cerebral ischaemia or cerebral oedema. Intradialytic hypotension
is common affecting 30-40% of treatments and is consistently associated with at least a 30%
increase in mortality and reduced quality-of-life. These dynamic changes in Blood Pressure
(BP) and perfusion might be associated with altered cognition but the data are sparse and
conflicting, possibly reflecting differences in study design; such as different methods and
timings for cognitive assessments. Several small studies show cognitive function is best
immediately before haemodialysis, worse during haemodialysis and improves the day after with
a possible link to sudden fluid removal . Our own experience, using the Montreal Cognitive
Assessment in 100 haemodialysis patients also showed cognitive decline during haemodialysis.
A recent retrospective study of 121,000 patients report that peritoneal dialysis is
associated with a 26% lesser-adjusted risk of newly diagnosed dementia compared to
haemodialysis. One plausible mechanism of that benefit is that peritoneal dialysis does not
cause sudden reductions in blood pressure.
Absence of intradialytic hypotension is emerging as a novel treatment goal 30. One possible
way to prevent hypotension is to increase treatment time or frequency to allow more gentle
fluid removal. A clinical trial of 245 patients showed 6 times weekly haemodialysis improved
physical health scores whilst reducing intradialytic hypotension, fluid gains and left
ventricular mass. A preliminary repeated measures study of 12 patients showed extended
overnight haemodialysis was associated with improved cognitive function scores. These data
are encouraging but come at the expense of increased treatment complications, cost and are
currently unfeasible in most UK centres and worldwide. The use of cooler dialysate (34-35°C)
to prevent intradialytic hypotension was first described in 1981. However, this therapy
remains greatly underused because of perceptions about thermal symptoms. Cooler dialysate
doesn't necessarily lower core-temperature and it is thought to prevent intradialytic
hypotension by preventing a rise in core temperature and subsequent systemic vasodilation. A
recent systematic review of cooler dialysate analyzed 26 trials in 484 patients. Compared
with standard temperature dialysis, cooler dialysis reduced the rate of intradialytic
hypotension by 70% (95% CI, 49-89%). Confidence in the estimates was limited by small sample
sizes, attrition and a lack of appropriate blinding with no trial reporting long-term
outcomes. A recent RfPB grant funded pilot clinical trial in 38 patients, showed lower
temperature of dialysis fluid prevented the progression of ischemic brain white matter
changes after one year which appeared to be linked to hemodynamic stability. The same trial
also reported cooler dialysis fluid improved cardiac structure and function .
The effects of cooler dialysate on cognitive impairment, quality-of-life and illness burden
have not been robustly tested or are not known. How well tolerated cooler dialysis fluid is
also not well reported. A recent editorial called for larger trials using this cheap and
universally applicable intervention that focused on these patient important outcomes. The
current low usage of cooler dialysate in the UK affords an opportunity to definitively test
this simple modification to haemodialysis as a potential intervention to prevent cognitive
dysfunction and quality-of-life. There are several uncertainties around study design of a
definitive trial of cooler dialysate and cognitive impairment, hence the need to formally
assess these in a feasibility study.
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