Peritoneal Dialysis Complication Clinical Trial
Official title:
Assessing Fluid Status of Peritoneal Dialysis Patients With Assistance of Lung Ultrasound
- As studied previously, lung congestion is very prevalent however usually asymptomatic in
dialysis patients. Fluid overload is associated with hospitalizations, worse
cardiovascular outcomes and mortality in PD patients.
- The clinical exam is the only tool used currently to monitor volume status of PD
patients, and has been found to have poor sensitivity and specificity for lung
congestion compared to lung ultrasound. In current practice, patients are seen and
examined monthly at their home dialysis units by the nurses. The nephrologist separately
examines the patient monthly, possibly days to weeks after the nurse visit, and
potentially only quarterly with the use of telehealth visits.
- Lung ultrasound is a relatively simple and cheap tool to assess for lung congestion,
with little inter-operator variability and good reproducibility.
- There are limited studies of lung ultrasound in peritoneal dialysis, and none in the
United States. Lung ultrasound may be useful as an objective measure of lung congestion
in patients without signs or symptoms of fluid overload.
Aims of this study
- This study aims to determine the prevalence of subclinical fluid overload in peritoneal
dialysis patients.
- The investigators aim to determine the added benefit of lung ultrasound to standard
clinical practice of fluid management in PD patients.
- The investigators aim to assess the association of patient characteristics with lung
congestion.
- The investigators also aim to assess the agreement between nurse physical exam and lung
ultrasound for fluid overload.
Study Design:
- Cross-sectional study, inviting PD patients at 10 Northern CA home dialysis units to
participate. One-time ultrasound done during monthly nurse visit between December 2019
and March 2020. All patients present for their monthly visit at participating home
dialysis units on days in which ultrasound available will be eligible, unless they had
already completed an ultrasound for the study.
- Eligible patients approached for informed consent
- Ultrasound method: 28 areas of the anterior and lateral thorax examined for B lines,
need at least 3 B lines in each field to be counted- recorded for future validation
- Training: lung ultrasound training modules accredited by American College of Emergency
Physicians, in addition to dedicated rotation of ultrasound training during internal
medicine residency.
- Separate nurse clinical evaluation- yes or no, nurse blinded from ultrasound results
- Patient characteristics obtained from dialysis EHR and form 2728: Age, gender (male sex
%), race, ethnicity, case of ESRD, dialysis vintage (mo), PD modality, BMI, DM (%), SBP,
DBP, albumin , # of antihypertensives, use of diuretic, use of icodextrin, PD Rx, 24
hour urine volume, lung disease (%), heart failure (%)
- Lung ultrasound info documented in EHR along with nurse evaluation. If moderate-severe
lung congestion on ultrasound, nephrologist notified in person, by phone or fax.
- Prescription changes from nephrologist (diuretic adjustment, dextrose concentration
change, addition of icodextrin, or none) within 2 weeks tracked in EHR and/or in person
with dialysis nurse
- Sample size calculation- assuming 30% subclinical fluid overload prevalence, 95%
confidence interval of prevalence of subclinical fluid overload with 10% margin of
error-> 81 patients
;
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