Don’t Flog the Fistulas: Slow Hemodialysis Blood Flow!

This blog post was made by Dr. John Agar on January 4, 2018.
Don’t Flog the Fistulas:  Slow Hemodialysis Blood Flow!

This post was first published on 03/14/2014. Do to its popularity, we would like to share it again.

The use of excessively high blood flow rates (read "pump speed") during dialysis—flow rates of upwards of 350 ml/minute—appears to be a US-only phenomenon (read "tragedy"). They are symptomatic of the short-hour dialysis epidemic that is also a US-only phenomenon.

When will US nephrologists learn?

The mean blood flow rate in the US (DOPPS 2011) is ~450 ml/min. The mean blood flow rate in Australia and New Zealand is ~300 ml/min (~36% less). Blood flow rates in Australia and New Zealand are similar to those used throughout Europe, and both are still greater than flow rates used in Japan. Patient session times in the US are also markedly shorter than in any other country. And, patient survival in the US is dramatically less than in any other country—yet patient age, incidence/prevalence of diabetes, and cardiovascular morbidity is no different.

The flawed logic of US dialysis, driven as it is by the twin forces of profit and through-put, is that short, and commonly also infrequent dialysis is somehow "OK." Well, it is not OK. The misguided view that shorter treatment times—only possible if blood flow rates are screwed way up in an attempt to achieve the CMS-approved Kt/V (also a flawed and discredited measure of dialysis) are somehow 'acceptable', is a fallacy that has benighted US dialysis for more than two decades.

Speaker after speaker at the recent Annual Dialysis Conference in Atlanta (February 8th - 11th 2013)—myself included, in all of my four separate addresses to the conference, including the conference-opening Keynote speech—pleaded for longer, more frequent and gentler dialysis regimens.

Speaker after speaker emphasised the benefits of slower blood flow rates and longer dialysis time on patient symptomatology (nausea and vomiting, cramp induction, in-treatment hypotension, post-treatment recovery time), on middle molecular clearance from deep compartmental tissues (Eloot)1, on prevention of myocardial and other organ 'stunning' that accompanies rapid volume contraction (McIntyre), and on quality of life and survival.

Nephrologists who do not understand the simple principles and widely documented advantages of slower volume removal and better solute clearance that accompany longer time on dialysis simply do not understand the first principles of dialysis.

They might do well to read the literature that confirms these unassailable dialysis facts. They might do well to hear the message—a message given and shared by every dialysis expert—that the only...repeat ONLY...determinant of good dialysis, of a well patient, and of a long-surviving patient, is the time spent each week on dialysis: the weekly membrane contact time.2

They are the poorer if they have not read and understood the potent message about 'time and frequency' left to us by Belding Scribner and Dimitri Oreopoulos3 – the two regarded widely as the 'fathers of modern maintenance dialysis' ('Scrib' for HD and Dimitri for PD). This meaasge was contained in their lightning-rod 2002 paper: The Hemodialysis Product (HDP): A Better Index of Dialysis Adequacy than Kt/V.3

They might even do well to attend the next ADC.

It is self-evident and has been long understood that the NCDS study, the study that spawned the iniquitous concept of Kt/V, got it badly (and sadly) wrong. It was not 'K' that mattered...it was 't'. Boosting K, by employing an ever faster and more furious pump speed to allow the contraction of 't', is incorrect. It kills people! Increasing 't' and, in the process, allowing the speed and ferocity of the dialysis process to be dialled back, saves people. It saves well-being as well as lives.

On a different but parallel plane, the December 2013 issue of CJASN featured a special section on fistula flow and flow dynamics. It emphasised the many causes of turbulence that accompany venous limb endothelial damage and in-fistula stenosis. One of these is the interruption and/or disruption of normal vascular laminar flow that occurs when the venous needle return jets into and against the venous endothelium at the site of venous return, creating physical turbulence and biochemical excitation of nitric oxide production...factors intimately associated with up-stream in-vessel stenosis.

At a symptom level, short dialysis treatments are symptom-rich; long treatments are symptom-free. Shorter treatments induce ever more cramp, hypotension, and misery. The shorter the treatment, the more comes the complaint: "I can't take this anymore" ...and the louder the pleas to "take me off".

Just think about it ...

  • The shorter the treatment, the faster the removal of fluid must be to attain "dry weight".
  • The faster the fluid removal, the more there is a risk of hypotension.
  • The greater the risk of hypotension, the more likely is the need for saline resuscitation.
  • The more saline that is given, the greater the counterproductive re-infusion of salt and water—and isn't this exactly what the dialysis process has been intent on removing?
  • The greater the rate of contraction of the circulating blood volume, the greater the dimension of organ "stun"...and this affects more than just the heart!
  • Residual renal function plummets as repeated acute kidney injury results from renal ischaemia.
  • Cerebral function suffers from repeated hypo-perfusive cerebral injury.

The list is endless, yet somehow, the ignorance goes on. Yet, the cure is so simple that is beggars description that it has been so long ignored. Gentleness...respect for our patients and their physiology, and, above all, time.

Speaker after speaker at the ADC said it. Speaker after speaker pleaded.

Slow it down, America.

References:

  1. Eloot S, Vanholder R, Van Biesen W. Dialysis duration: the longer the better, but why? [corrected]. Nephrol Dial Transplant. 2012 Nov;27(11):3975-8
  2. Agar JWM, MacGregor MS, Blagg CR. Chronic Maintenance Hemodialysis: Making sense of hemodialysis terminology. Hemodialysis Int. 11(2): 252-262, April 2007
  3. Scribner BH, Oreopoulos DG, The Hemodialysis Product (HDP): A Better Index of Dialysis Adequacy than Kt/V, Dialysis & Transplantation, 2002 Jan;31(1):13-15

Comments

  • Steve

    Jan 12, 2018 4:02 AM

    I am my wife’s care giver and home-hemo partner. When she initially started home-hemo she did 5-6 treatments weekly at 3 1/2 hours each with a blood pump speed of 400. (The frequency of treatments is due to her lack of kidneys. She had a bi-lateral nephrectomy because of Polycystic Kidney Diesase.) Her health improved significantly after switching to NOCTURNAL home-hemo because her treatments were extended to 7 1/2 hours at a rate of 270. This allowed her to go from 5-6 sessions weekly to 4, lessening the strain on her heart and greatly improving her quality of life.
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  • John Agar

    Jan 05, 2018 11:27 AM

    Mel ... never a truer word was spoken.

    The introduction (in the US) of dialysis reimbursement by the hour - how simple, how sensible, how life-returning - says it all. But ... in your current political climate, I fear it can never (nor will) ever happen.

    Joe’s comment rings true, too, for it cuts to the heart of ‘the least attainable hurting the least able’ dichotomy of US medical ‘care’ - if ‘care’ it can be called.

    Again, we who are lucky enough to live outside the US really do feel for you. You are not a pretty sight.
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  • tyler molzahn

    Jan 05, 2018 6:11 AM

    My wife passed away in Sept and I tried to tell the DR. and RN the 450 they were running was too hard on her. It's too late now, hope this helps others.
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    • John Agar

      Jan 05, 2018 10:53 PM

      Tyler, I am so sorry to hear of your loss.
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  • Joe LaReau

    Jan 05, 2018 12:24 AM

    Insurance-that says it all
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  • Mel Hodge

    Jan 04, 2018 11:56 PM

    Sadly, as long as 85% of American dialysis patients are treated in for-profit dialysis centers AND these centers are paid by Medicare a fixed amount per treatment, the interest of the patient in long treatments and the financial interest of the centers in short treatments to maximize revenue will remain in direct conflict... and the too short, too miserable lives of American patients will continue.

    This will change if, and only if, the interests of patients and dialysis centers are aligned by Medicare replacing payment per treatment by payment per treatment-hour.

    My perspective as someone who spent his entire career starting, running, and advising for-profit businesses tells me the present sorry outlook for American patients is unlikely to change if this fundamental conflict of Interest is not resolved.
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    • John Agar

      Jan 09, 2018 5:43 AM

      Mel ... I completely agree with you, and dialysis reimbursement 'by the hour' would be a clear winner with me ... but (also sadly) I see little prospect of that, unless the nephrology community in the Us were to overwhelmingly support it. However, I see that as a patient-oriented response that is unlikely to occur . That leaves but a few lone voices to call from the wilderness.
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