High incidence of severe twin hemodialysis catheter infections in elderly women: Possible roles of insufficient nutrition and social support

David Tovbin, A. Mashal, M. Friger, R. Landver, T. Jan, A. Markowitz, M. Mostoslavsky, Y. Gidron

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: Cuffed-tunneled hemodialysis (HD) catheters are recommended as a bridging therapy until peripheral access is available, but their long-term use is controversial. Aim: To evaluate the complications and lifetime of twin-tunneled HD catheters and to identify parameters which could predict their outcome. Methods: 29 chronic HD patients (19 female and 10 male) were inserted with twin hemodialysis catheters (28 Tesio, 1 Schon Duoflow), followed for up to 9 months or until catheter loss, and evaluated for severe catheter-related complications necessitating catheter removal. Since the most common severe complication was catheter-related infection, we retrospectively examined whether parameters such as age, gender, duration of end-stage renal disease, delivered dose of dialysis, nutrition, diabetes and indices of social support correlate with this outcome. Results: Severe catheter infection requiring catheter removal occurred in 11 patients (10 female). Of these infected female patients, 9 were elderly (ge; 67 years) and in 6 of those, catheter infection was fatal (54% of infected cases). At 9 months, severe catheter infection and related patient death rates were 38 and 21%, respectively. Severe catheter infection was significantly related to less social support (p < 0.005), older age, female gender, lower nPCR (all p < 0.05), and tended to be related to shorter end-stage renal disease duration prior to catheter insertion (p = 0.06). Conclusion: This study demonstrated that twin HD catheters are associated with a high incidence of severe catheter-related infections which was most significantly related to social-support as well as inadequate nutrition, older age and female gender. Therefore, we suggest early removal of the catheter, enhancement of social support and dietary counseling for the elderly and lonely HD patients using this type of catheter.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)26-30
Number of pages5
JournalNephron
Volume89
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 2001
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Cuffed catheters
  • Extraction
  • Infection
  • Nutrition
  • Social support

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Physiology
  • Nephrology
  • Physiology (medical)
  • Urology

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