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Hemodialysis Prescribing Patterns of Hospital & Satellite Centres: An Institution-Wide Observational Study

Melville, S.; MacKinnon, M.; Michaud, J.

2026-04-22 nephrology
10.64898/2026.04.20.26351284 medRxiv
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BackgroundLife-sustaining hemodialysis (HD) is onerous for patients, especially those with multiple co-morbidities and advanced age. A standard HD prescription is 720 minutes per week. Alternative HD regiments have been proposed in attempt to maintain quality of life (QOL). Studies are needed to investigate the efficacy and safety of less frequent HD prescriptions in this population. This is an institution-wide observational study in New Brunswick, Canada to compare HD prescriptions and the impact on QOL and mortality. ObjectiveThe purpose of this study is to assess the current HD prescribing practices at a provincial healthcare institution in relation to patient QOL. DesignProspective Observational Study. SettingSingle centre hospital and satellite hemodialysis units. PatientsVoluntarily consented patients undergoing in-centre hemodialysis treatment. MeasurementsObservational clinical data was collected for each study participant from their hospital and dialysis electronic medical records. The KDQOL-36TM questionnaire was used to assess patient-reported quality of life at the time of consent. MethodsAdults undergoing in-centre or satellite site HD for at least 3 months were eligible to participate. Consenting patient participants were grouped by HD prescription whether they were prescribed 720 minutes or more per week or less than 720 minutes per week. All participants completed the KDQOL-36 TM questionnaire to estimate QOL and groups were compared using the Mann-Whitney U statistical test. Emergency department visits, hospitalizations, and mortality were analyzed using a negative binomial regression or a logistic regression. ResultsWe enrolled 140 patient participants; 41 were undergoing less than 720 minutes per week of HD and 99 were undergoing 720 minutes or more of HD per week. Patients who were undergoing less than 720 minutes per week of HD were older [Median (IQR): 76 (72- 81) yrs. vs. 64 (55 - 75) yrs.; p < 0.001], had higher median (IQR) QOL scores on the Symptoms/ Problems List scale on the KDQOL-36 TM questionnaire [79.2 (70.8 - 88.5 vs. 70.8 (62.5 - 81.3); p = 0.0022], and were less likely to present to the emergency department (incident rate ratio 0.52, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.33-0.81). Mortality was similar between groups, even when adjusted for age and comorbidity score (odds ratio 1.62, 95% CI 0.59-4.49). LimitationsPatient participant enrollment was limited by the single centre nature of this study. As this was an observational study, we did not account for how long the patients had been prescribed less than 720 minutes of hemodialysis. We did not include a frailty assessment of the study participants. A higher number of study participants may have identified significant trends in mortality. ConclusionsThe results of this study show that patients undergoing less than 720 minutes of weekly HD had a higher QOL score for the KDQOL-36 TM Symptoms/ Problems List scale, were less frequently in the emergency department and were not more likely to die than patients undergoing 720 minutes or more of weekly HD. Further studies are required to assess the feasibility and safety of a conservative model of HD prescribing to improve QOL of patients with palliative care treatment goals.

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