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Peritoneal dialysis in Tunisia: complications, technique and patient´s survival (twenty-seven years of experience in a single center)
Abstract
Introduction: peritoneal dialysis (PD) is a renal replacement therapy method that offers various advantages to end-stage renal disease patients. The aim of our study was to analyze patient characteristics, peritonitis and clinical outcome over a 27-year period of PD in our center.
Methods: retrospective study of incident patients on PD from January 1990 to December 2017. A total of 304 patients were enrolled in the study group. All patients over 15 years of age entering the dialysis program were included in the study. Patients dropping out from PD within three months were all excluded. Biochemical and demographic variables, peritonitis episodes and patient and technique survival were analyzed.
Results: the PD prevalence in our center was 4.5% during the study period; the mean age was 46.47 ± 18.6 years; diabetic nephropathy was the main cause of chronic kidney disease: 35.5% (n=108). Cardiovascular disease was the main cause of death: 39.6% (n=34). The peritonitis rate was 0.68 episode per patient-year. Ultrafiltration failure was the most important cause of PD withdrawal: 43% (n=60). Occurrence of peritonitis was the only independent predictor of technique failure: adjusted relative risk [aRR] 5.07, 95% CI 2.69-9.58; p<0.001. The overall non-adjusted patient survival was around 100%, 95% and less than 20% at 1, 4 and 25 years respectively basing on the Kaplan-Meier analysis. The group undergoing renal transplantation had the best survival rate.
Conclusion: peritonitis remains the most common complication as well as the most provider of technique failure and patient´s transfer to hemodialysis. The technique survival was better in case of absence of peritonitis. However, our series showed the superiority of hemodialysis over PD in terms of overall patient survival.