Hemodialysis Complication Clinical Trial
Official title:
Strategies for Asymmetrical Triacetate Dialyzer
Not all dialysis patients tolerate heparin anticoagulation. Heparin should be avoided in
patients at high risk of bleeding. Strategies include saline infusion, citrate-containing
dialysate, regional citrate anticoagulation and heparin-coated membranes. We recently studied
the combination of a heparin-coated membrane and citrate-containing dialysate, with a success
rate of 94% . Although this combination resulted in low rates of clotting, heparin-coated
membranes are not ubiquitously available. The quest for easy to perform, safe and affordable
heparin-free dialysis is on. Asymmetric cellulose triacetate (ATA) dialyzers have a low
degree of platelet contact activation and might be an alternative to heparin-coated
dialyzers.
This is a phase II pilot study in maintenance dialysis patients. Study design is a two-arm
open-label cross-over study. In Arm 1, patients were dialyzed using a 1.9 m2 ATA membrane
(Solaceaâ„¢-19H, Nipro Corp., Japan) in combination with citrate (1 mM) containing dialysate.
In Arm 2, patients were dialyzed with the same 1.9 m2 ATA membrane, in combination with high
volume predilution hemodiafiltration. The primary endpoint was the success rate to complete 4
hours of hemodialysis without preterm clotting.
Anticoagulation is one of the supporting pillars of chronic hemodialysis (HD). The optimal
anticoagulant regimen provides full anticoagulation of the extracorporeal circuit with
minimal systemic effects and comes at an affordable cost. Unfractionated heparin (UFH) has
been the standard of care for many years. In several countries, UFH has gradually been
replaced by low molecular weight heparins (LMWH). LMWH are easy to use as they can be
administered as a bolus injection and reduce membrane fibrin and platelet deposition. Both
UFH and LMWH provide adequate anticoagulation of the extracorporeal circuit, at the price of
systemic anticoagulation. Apart from bleeding, the administration of unfractionated heparins
has also been associated with dyslipidemia, hypoaldosteronism and hyperkalemia, thrombopenia,
osteoporosis, pruritus, and hypersensitivity reactions.
Several alternative anticoagulation regimens have been proposed including saline infusion,
heparin coating of the dialyzer membrane as well as regional citrate anticoagulation.
Regional citrate anticoagulation is performed by infusing citrate into the arterial line of
the dialysis tubing to reduce ionized calcium concentrations in order to minimize propagation
of the coagulation cascade. Ionized calcium concentrations are restored by calcium
supplementation prior to reinfusion of the blood into the patient. The HepZero study
suggested that regional citrate anticoagulation is superior to heparin-coated
polyacrylonitrile dialyzers (AN69ST; Nephral 300ST, Gambro) and resulted in in significantly
greater instantaneous urea nitrogen clearance. While generally safe and adequate, regional
citrate anticoagulation requires additional actions during preparatory phase (preparation of
citrate and calcium infusion pumps) as well as during the treatment (measurement of ionized
calcium).
Recently, acetate-free citrate-containing dialysate concentrates were introduced into
clinical practice. Besides the advantages of acetate-free dialysate, this provides a modest
local anticoagulant effect inside the dialyzer. Citrate-containing dialysate allowed to
reduce heparin dose while maintaining extracorporeal circuit patency and dialyzer clearance.
Recently, citrate-containing dialysate and a heparin-coated dialyzer were combined. In one
study, non-inferiority to regional citrate anticoagulation was demonstrated
The abovementioned studies demonstrate that hemodialysis without systemic heparinization is
feasible. However, such procedures are more cumbersome, require more manpower, additional
biochemical testing and/ or more expensive consumables. The aim of the current study is to
test two different strategies for systemic heparin-free dialysis with an asymmetrical
tri-acetate hemodialyzer.
Trial objectives To evaluate the feasability, safety and adequacy of systemic heparin-free
dialysis using an asymmetrical tri-acetate dialyzer membrane, with or without the combination
with citrate containing dialysate.
The main objective of the study is to test efficacy of the two study interventions to perform
standard duration (i.e. 4 hours) hemodialysis without interruption due to clotting phenomena
and without the use of heparin or low molecular weight heparins.
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