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Kt/V

In medicine, Kt/V is a number used to quantify hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis treatment adequacy.

  • K – dialyzer clearance of urea
  • t – dialysis time
  • V – volume of distribution of urea, approximately equal to patient's total body water

In the context of hemodialysis, Kt/V is a pseudo-dimensionless number; it is dependent on the pre- and post-dialysis concentration (see below). It is not the product of K and t divided by V, as would be the case in a true dimensionless number.[1] In peritoneal dialysis, it isn't dimensionless at all.

It was developed by Frank Gotch and John Sargent as a way for measuring the dose of dialysis when they analyzed the data from the National Cooperative Dialysis Study.[2] In hemodialysis the US National Kidney Foundation Kt/V target is ≥ 1.3, so that one can be sure that the delivered dose is at least 1.2.[3] In peritoneal dialysis the target is ≥ 1.7/week.[3]

Despite the name, Kt/V is quite different from standardized Kt/V.

Rationale for Kt/V as a marker of dialysis adequacy edit

K (clearance) multiplied by t (time) is a volume (since mL/min × min = mL, or L/h × h = L), and (K × t) can be thought of as the mL or L of fluid (blood in this case) cleared of urea (or any other solute) during the course of a single treatment. V also is a volume, expressed in mL or L. So the ratio of K × t / V is a so-called "dimensionless ratio" and can be thought of as a multiple of the volume of plasma cleared of urea divided by the distribution volume of urea. When Kt/V = 1.0, a volume of blood equal to the distribution volume of urea has been completely cleared of urea.

The relationship between Kt/V and the concentration of urea C at the end of dialysis can be derived from the first-order differential equation that describes exponential decay and models the clearance of any substance from the body where the concentration of that substance decreases in an exponential fashion:

 

 

 

 

 

(1)

where

  • C is the concentration [mol/m3]
  • t is the time [s]
  • K is the clearance [m3/s]
  • V is the volume of distribution [m3]

From the above definitions it follows that   is the first derivative of concentration with respect to time, i.e. the change in concentration with time.

This equation is separable and can be integrated (assuming K and V are constant) as follows:

 

 

 

 

 

(2a)

After integration,

 

 

 

 

 

(2b)

where

  • c is the constant of integration

If one takes the antilog of equation 2b the result is:

 

 

 

 

 

(2c)

where

By integer exponentiation this can be written as:

 

 

 

 

 

(3)

where

  • C0 is the concentration at the beginning of dialysis [mmol/L] or [mol/m3].

The above equation can also be written as[2]

 

 

 

 

 

(4)

Normally we measure postdialysis serum urea nitrogen concentration C and compare this with the initial or predialysis level C0. The session length or time is t and this is measured by the clock. The dialyzer clearance K is usually estimated, based on the urea transfer ability of the dialyzer (a function of its size and membrane permeability), the blood flow rate, and the dialysate flow rate.[4] In some dialysis machines, the urea clearance during dialysis is estimated by testing the ability of the dialyzer to remove a small salt load that is added to the dialysate during dialysis.

Relation to URR edit

The URR or Urea reduction ratio is simply the fractional reduction of urea during dialysis. So by definition, URR = 1 − C/C0. So 1−URR = C/C0. So by algebra, substituting into equation (4) above, since ln C/C0 = − ln C0/C, we get:

 

 

 

 

 

(8)

Sample calculation edit

Patient has a mass of 70 kg (154 lb) and gets a hemodialysis treatment that lasts 4 hours where the urea clearance is 215 mL/min.

  • K = 215 mL/min
  • t = 4.0 hours = 240 min
  • V = 70 kg × 0.6 L of water/kg of body mass = 42 L = 42,000 mL

Therefore:

Kt/V = 1.23

This means that if you dialyze a patient to a Kt/V of 1.23, and measure the postdialysis and predialysis urea nitrogen levels in the blood, then calculate the URR, then −ln(1−URR) should be about 1.23.

The math does not quite work out, and more complicated relationships have been worked-out to account for the fluid removal (ultrafiltration) during dialysis as well as urea generation (see urea reduction ratio). Nevertheless, the URR and Kt/V are so closely related mathematically, that their predictive power has been shown to be no different in terms of prediction of patient outcomes in observational studies.

Post-dialysis rebound edit

The above analysis assumes that urea is removed from a single compartment during dialysis. In fact, this Kt/V is usually called the "single-pool" Kt/V. Due to the multiple compartments in the human body, a significant concentration rebound occurs following hemodialysis. Usually rebound lowers the Kt/V by about 15%. The amount of rebound depends on the rate of dialysis (K) in relation to the size of the patient (V). Equations have been devised to predict the amount of rebound based on the ratio of K/V, but usually this is not necessary in clinical practice. One can use such equations to calculate an "equilibrated Kt/V" or a "double-pool Kt/V", and some think that this should be used as a measure of dialysis adequacy, but this is not widely done in the United States, and the KDOQI guidelines (see below) recommend using the regular single pool Kt/V for simplicity.

Peritoneal dialysis edit

Kt/V (in the context of peritoneal dialysis) was developed by in a series of articles on peritoneal dialysis.[5][6]

The steady-state solution of a simplified mass transfer equation that is used to describe the mass exchange over a semi-permeable membrane and models peritoneal dialysis is

 

 

 

 

 

(6a)

where

  • CB is the concentration in the blood [ mol/m3 ]
  • KD is the clearance [ m3/s ]
  •   is the urea mass generation [ mol/s ]

This can also be written as:

 

 

 

 

 

(6b)

The mass generation (of urea), in steady state, can be expressed as the mass (of urea) in the effluent per time:

 

 

 

 

 

(6c)

where

  • CE is the concentration of urea in effluent [ mol/m3 ]
  • VE is the volume of effluent [ m3 ]
  • t is the time [ s ]

Lysaght, motivated by equations 6b and 6c, defined the value KD:

 

 

 

 

 

(6d)

Lysaght uses "ml/min" for the clearance. In order to convert the above clearance (which is in m3/s) to ml/min one has to multiply by 60 × 1000 × 1000.

Once KD is defined the following equation is used to calculate Kt/V:

 

 

 

 

 

(7a)

where

  • V is the volume of distribution. It has to be in litres (L), as the equation is not really non-dimensional.

The 7/3 is used to adjust the Kt/V value so it can be compared to the Kt/V for hemodialysis, which is typically done thrice weekly in the USA.

Weekly Kt/V edit

To calculate the weekly Kt/V (for peritoneal dialysis) KD has to be in litres/day. Weekly Kt/V is defined by the following equation:

 

 

 

 

 

(7b)

Sample calculation edit

Assume:

  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  

Then by equation 6d, KD is: 1.3334×10−07 m3/s or 8.00 mL/min or 11.52 L/d.

Kt/V and the weekly Kt/V by equations 7a and 7b respectively are thus: 0.45978 and 1.9863.

A simplified analysis of Kt/V in PD edit

On a practical level, in peritoneal dialysis the calculation of Kt/V is often relatively easy because the fluid drained is usually close to 100% saturated with urea,[citation needed] i.e. the dialysate has equilibriated with the body. Therefore, the daily amount of plasma cleared is simply the drain volume divided by an estimate of the patient's volume of distribution.

As an example, if someone is infusing four 2 liter exchanges a day, and drains out a total of 9 liters per day, then they drain 9 × 7 = 63 liters per week. If the patient has an estimated total body water volume V of about 35 liters, then the weekly Kt/V would be 63/35, or about 1.8.

The above calculation is limited by the fact that the serum concentration of urea is changing during dialysis. So ideally this should not be used as it has not taken in account the urea level in dialysate or serum...so it cannot be labelled as urea clearance In automated PD this change cannot be ignored; thus, blood samples are usually measured at some time point in the day and assumed to be representative of an average value. The clearance is then calculated using this measurement.

Reason for adoption edit

Kt/V has been widely adopted because it was correlated with survival. Before Kt/V nephrologists measured the serum urea concentration (specifically the time-averaged concentration of urea (TAC of urea)), which was found not to be correlated with survival (due to its strong dependence on protein intake) and thus deemed an unreliable marker of dialysis adequacy.

Criticisms/disadvantages of Kt/V edit

  • It is complex and tedious to calculate. Many nephrologists have difficulty understanding it.
  • Urea is not associated with toxicity.[7]
  • Kt/V only measures a change in the concentration of urea and implicitly assumes the clearance of urea is comparable to other toxins. (It ignores molecules larger than urea having diffusion-limited transport - so called middle molecules).
  • Kt/V does not take into account the role of ultrafiltration.
  • It ignores the mass transfer between body compartments and across the plasma membrane (i.e. intracellular to extracellular transport), which has been shown to be important for the clearance of molecules such as phosphate. Practical use of Kt/V requires adjustment for rebound of the urea concentration due to the multi-compartmental nature of the body.
  • Kt/V may disadvantage women and smaller patients in terms of the amount of dialysis received. Normal kidney function may be modeled as optimal Glomerular filtration rate or GFR. GFR is usually normalized in people to body surface area. A man and a woman of similar body surface areas will have markedly different levels of total body water (which corresponds to V). Also, smaller people of either sex will have markedly lower levels of V, but only slightly lower levels of body surface area. For this reason, any dialysis dosing system that is based on V may tend to underdose smaller patients and women. Some investigators have proposed dosing based on surface area (S) instead of V, but clinicians usually measure the URR and then calculate Kt/V. One can "adjust" the Kt/V, to calculate a "surface-area-normalized" or "SAN"-Kt/V as well as a "SAN"-standard Kt/V. This puts a wrapper around Kt/V and normalizes it to body surface area.[8]

Importance of total weekly dialysis time and frequency edit

Kt/V has been criticized because quite high levels can be achieved, particularly in smaller patients, during relatively short dialysis sessions. This is especially true for small people, where "adequate" levels of Kt/V often can be achieved over 2 to 2.5 hours. One important part of dialysis adequacy has to do with adequate removal of salt and water, and also of solutes other than urea, especially larger molecular weight substances and phosphorus. Phosphorus and similar molecular weights remain elusive to filtration of any degree. A number of studies suggest that a longer amount of time on dialysis, or more frequent dialysis sessions, lead to better results. There have been various alternative methods of measuring dialysis adequacy, most of which have proposed some number based on Kt/V and number of dialysis sessions per week, e.g., the standardized Kt/V, or simply number of dialysis sessions per week squared multiplied by the hours on dialysis per session; e.g. the hemodialysis product by Scribner and Oreopoulos[9] It is not practical to give long dialysis sessions (greater than 4.5 hours) thrice a week in a dialysis center during the day. Longer sessions can be practically delivered if dialysis is done at home. Most experience has been gained with such long dialysis sessions given at night. Some centers are offering every-other-night or thrice a week nocturnal dialysis. The benefits of giving more frequent dialysis sessions is also an area of active study, and new easy-to-use machines are permitting easier use of home dialysis, where 2–3+ hour sessions can be given 4–7 days per week.

Kt/V minimums and targets for hemodialysis edit

One question in terms of Kt/V is, how much is enough? The answer has been based on observational studies, and the NIH-funded HEMO trial done in the United States, and also, on kinetic analysis. For a US perspective, see the KDOQI clinical practice guidelines[10] and for a United Kingdom perspective see: U.K. Renal Association clinical practice guidelines[11] According to the US guidelines, for thrice a week dialysis a Kt/V (without rebound) should be 1.2 at a minimum with a target value of 1.4 (15% above the minimum values). However, there is suggestive evidence that larger amounts may need to be given to women, smaller patients, malnourished patients, and patients with clinical problems. The recommended minimum Kt/V value changes depending on how many sessions per week are given, and is reduced for patients who have a substantial degree of residual renal function.

Kt/V minimums and targets for peritoneal dialysis edit

For a US perspective, see:[12] For the United States, the minimum weekly Kt/V target used to be 2.0. This was lowered to 1.7 in view of the results of a large randomized trial done in Mexico, the ADEMEX trial,[13] and also from reanalysis of previous observational study results from the perspective of residual kidney function.

For a United Kingdom perspective see:[14] This is still in draft form.

References edit

  1. ^ Bonert, M.; Saville, BA. (2010). "A non-dimensional analysis of hemodialysis". Open Biomed Eng J. 4: 138–55. doi:10.2174/1874120701004010138. PMC 3111706. PMID 21673980.
  2. ^ a b Gotch FA, Sargent JA (September 1985). "A mechanistic analysis of the National Cooperative Dialysis Study (NCDS)". Kidney Int. 28 (3): 526–34. doi:10.1038/ki.1985.160. PMID 3934452.
  3. ^ a b . Am J Kidney Dis. 35 (6 Suppl 2): S1–140. 2000. doi:10.1053/ajkd.2000.v35.aajkd03517. PMID 10895784. Archived from the original on 2006-09-03.
  4. ^ Babb AL, Popovich RP, Christopher TG, Scribner BH (1971). "The genesis of the square meter-hour hypothesis". Trans Am Soc Artif Intern Organs. 17: 81–91. PMID 5158139.
  5. ^ Lysaght MJ, Farrell PC (1989). "Membrane Phenomena and mass transfer kinetics in peritoneal dialysis". Journal of Membrane Science. 44 (1): 5–33. doi:10.1016/S0376-7388(00)82339-X.
  6. ^ Lysaght MJ, Pollock CA, Hallet MD, Ibels LS, Farrell PC (1989). "The relevance of urea kinetic modeling to CAPD". ASAIO Trans. 35 (4): 784–90. PMID 2611047.
  7. ^ Johnson WJ, Hagge WW, Wagoner RD, Dinapoli RP, Rosevear JW (January 1972). "Effects of urea loading in patients with far-advanced renal failure". Mayo Clinic Proceedings. 47 (1): 21–9. PMID 5008253.
  8. ^ Daugirdas JT et al. Surface-area-normalized (SAN) adjustment to Kt/V and weekly standard Kt/V. J Am Soc Nephrol (abstract) 2006. and Appendix A. Handbook of Dialysis, 4th Edition. Daugirdas JT, Blake PB, Ing TS, editors. Lippincott Williams and Wilkins, Philadelphia, 2007.
  9. ^ Scribner BH, Oreopoulos DG (January 2002). (PDF). Dialysis & Transplantation. 31 (1): 13–5. Archived from the original (mirrored PDF) on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2007-02-07.
  10. ^ KDOQI Hemodialysis Adequacy 2007-02-11 at the Wayback Machine Update 2006.
  11. ^ U.K. Renal Association Clinical Practice Guidelines, 2006 Update. 2007-02-09 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ KDOQI Peritoneal Adequacy 2007-07-11 at the Wayback Machine Update 2006.
  13. ^ Paniagua R, Amato D, Vonesh E, et al. (May 2002). "Effects of increased peritoneal clearances on mortality rates in peritoneal dialysis: ADEMEX, a prospective, randomized, controlled trial". J Am Soc Nephrol. 13 (5): 1307–20. doi:10.1681/ASN.V1351307. PMID 11961019.
  14. ^ U.K. Renal Association Clinical Practice Guidelines, Peritoneal Dialysis. 2007-02-10 at the Wayback Machine 2006 Update.

External links edit

Hemodialysis edit

  • – a description of URR and Kt/V from the Kidney and Urologic Diseases Clearinghouse.
  • Kt/V and the adequacy of hemodialysis – UpToDate.com

Peritoneal dialysis edit

  • – American Association of Kidney Patients
  • – a description of URR and Kt/V from the Kidney and Urologic Diseases Clearinghouse.

Calculators edit

  • spKt/V,eKt/V,URR,nPCR,GNRI etc. dialysis calculation – hdtool.net.
  • free Kt/V calculators, single pool and equilibrated HD, PD, no login needed, site used by dozens of dialysis centers around the world for over 10 years – kt-v.net
  • Web/javascript program that does formal 2-pool urea kinetics in multiple patients – ureakinetics.org
  • Kt/V calculator – medindia.com
  • – HDCN

medicine, number, used, quantify, hemodialysis, peritoneal, dialysis, treatment, adequacy, dialyzer, clearance, urea, dialysis, time, volume, distribution, urea, approximately, equal, patient, total, body, waterin, context, hemodialysis, pseudo, dimensionless,. In medicine Kt V is a number used to quantify hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis treatment adequacy K dialyzer clearance of urea t dialysis time V volume of distribution of urea approximately equal to patient s total body waterIn the context of hemodialysis Kt V is a pseudo dimensionless number it is dependent on the pre and post dialysis concentration see below It is not the product of K and t divided by V as would be the case in a true dimensionless number 1 In peritoneal dialysis it isn t dimensionless at all It was developed by Frank Gotch and John Sargent as a way for measuring the dose of dialysis when they analyzed the data from the National Cooperative Dialysis Study 2 In hemodialysis the US National Kidney Foundation Kt V target is 1 3 so that one can be sure that the delivered dose is at least 1 2 3 In peritoneal dialysis the target is 1 7 week 3 Despite the name Kt V is quite different from standardized Kt V Contents 1 Rationale for Kt V as a marker of dialysis adequacy 2 Relation to URR 2 1 Sample calculation 2 2 Post dialysis rebound 3 Peritoneal dialysis 3 1 Weekly Kt V 3 2 Sample calculation 3 3 A simplified analysis of Kt V in PD 4 Reason for adoption 5 Criticisms disadvantages of Kt V 5 1 Importance of total weekly dialysis time and frequency 5 2 Kt V minimums and targets for hemodialysis 5 3 Kt V minimums and targets for peritoneal dialysis 6 References 7 External links 7 1 Hemodialysis 7 2 Peritoneal dialysis 7 3 CalculatorsRationale for Kt V as a marker of dialysis adequacy editK clearance multiplied by t time is a volume since mL min min mL or L h h L and K t can be thought of as the mL or L of fluid blood in this case cleared of urea or any other solute during the course of a single treatment V also is a volume expressed in mL or L So the ratio of K t V is a so called dimensionless ratio and can be thought of as a multiple of the volume of plasma cleared of urea divided by the distribution volume of urea When Kt V 1 0 a volume of blood equal to the distribution volume of urea has been completely cleared of urea The relationship between Kt V and the concentration of urea C at the end of dialysis can be derived from the first order differential equation that describes exponential decay and models the clearance of any substance from the body where the concentration of that substance decreases in an exponential fashion VdCdt KC displaystyle V frac dC dt KC nbsp 1 where C is the concentration mol m3 t is the time s K is the clearance m3 s V is the volume of distribution m3 From the above definitions it follows that dCdt displaystyle frac dC dt nbsp is the first derivative of concentration with respect to time i e the change in concentration with time This equation is separable and can be integrated assuming K and V are constant as follows 1CdC KVdt displaystyle int frac 1 C dC int frac K V dt nbsp 2a After integration ln C KtV c displaystyle ln C frac Kt V mbox c nbsp 2b where c is the constant of integrationIf one takes the antilog of equation 2b the result is C e KtV c displaystyle C e frac Kt V mathrm c nbsp 2c where e is the base of the natural logarithmBy integer exponentiation this can be written as C C0e KtV displaystyle C C 0 e frac Kt V nbsp 3 where C0 is the concentration at the beginning of dialysis mmol L or mol m3 The above equation can also be written as 2 KtV ln CoC displaystyle frac Kt V ln frac C o C nbsp 4 Normally we measure postdialysis serum urea nitrogen concentration C and compare this with the initial or predialysis level C0 The session length or time is t and this is measured by the clock The dialyzer clearance K is usually estimated based on the urea transfer ability of the dialyzer a function of its size and membrane permeability the blood flow rate and the dialysate flow rate 4 In some dialysis machines the urea clearance during dialysis is estimated by testing the ability of the dialyzer to remove a small salt load that is added to the dialysate during dialysis Relation to URR editThe URR or Urea reduction ratio is simply the fractional reduction of urea during dialysis So by definition URR 1 C C0 So 1 URR C C0 So by algebra substituting into equation 4 above since ln C C0 ln C0 C we get KtV ln 1 URR displaystyle frac Kt V ln 1 URR nbsp 8 Sample calculation edit Patient has a mass of 70 kg 154 lb and gets a hemodialysis treatment that lasts 4 hours where the urea clearance is 215 mL min K 215 mL min t 4 0 hours 240 min V 70 kg 0 6 L of water kg of body mass 42 L 42 000 mLTherefore Kt V 1 23This means that if you dialyze a patient to a Kt V of 1 23 and measure the postdialysis and predialysis urea nitrogen levels in the blood then calculate the URR then ln 1 URR should be about 1 23 The math does not quite work out and more complicated relationships have been worked out to account for the fluid removal ultrafiltration during dialysis as well as urea generation see urea reduction ratio Nevertheless the URR and Kt V are so closely related mathematically that their predictive power has been shown to be no different in terms of prediction of patient outcomes in observational studies Post dialysis rebound edit The above analysis assumes that urea is removed from a single compartment during dialysis In fact this Kt V is usually called the single pool Kt V Due to the multiple compartments in the human body a significant concentration rebound occurs following hemodialysis Usually rebound lowers the Kt V by about 15 The amount of rebound depends on the rate of dialysis K in relation to the size of the patient V Equations have been devised to predict the amount of rebound based on the ratio of K V but usually this is not necessary in clinical practice One can use such equations to calculate an equilibrated Kt V or a double pool Kt V and some think that this should be used as a measure of dialysis adequacy but this is not widely done in the United States and the KDOQI guidelines see below recommend using the regular single pool Kt V for simplicity Peritoneal dialysis editKt V in the context of peritoneal dialysis was developed by Michael J Lysaght in a series of articles on peritoneal dialysis 5 6 The steady state solution of a simplified mass transfer equation that is used to describe the mass exchange over a semi permeable membrane and models peritoneal dialysis is CB m K displaystyle C B dot m K nbsp 6a where CB is the concentration in the blood mol m3 KD is the clearance m3 s m displaystyle dot m nbsp is the urea mass generation mol s This can also be written as K m CB displaystyle K dot m C B nbsp 6b The mass generation of urea in steady state can be expressed as the mass of urea in the effluent per time m CE VEt displaystyle dot m frac C E cdot V E t nbsp 6c where CE is the concentration of urea in effluent mol m3 VE is the volume of effluent m3 t is the time s Lysaght motivated by equations 6b and 6c defined the value KD KD CE VECB t displaystyle K D frac C E cdot V E C B cdot t nbsp 6d Lysaght uses ml min for the clearance In order to convert the above clearance which is in m3 s to ml min one has to multiply by 60 1000 1000 Once KD is defined the following equation is used to calculate Kt V K tV 7 3 KDVD displaystyle frac K cdot t V frac 7 3 cdot K D V D nbsp 7a where V is the volume of distribution It has to be in litres L as the equation is not really non dimensional The 7 3 is used to adjust the Kt V value so it can be compared to the Kt V for hemodialysis which is typically done thrice weekly in the USA Weekly Kt V edit To calculate the weekly Kt V for peritoneal dialysis KD has to be in litres day Weekly Kt V is defined by the following equation Weekly Kt V 7KD L day V L displaystyle mbox Weekly Kt V frac 7K D mathrm L mbox day V mathrm L nbsp 7b Sample calculation edit Assume CB mean 22 817 mmol L displaystyle C B mbox mean 22 817 mbox mmol L nbsp CD 17 524 mmol L displaystyle C D 17 524 mbox mmol L nbsp VD 3 75 L per exchange or 15 L day displaystyle V D 3 75 mbox L per exchange or 15 mbox L day nbsp VB 40 6 L displaystyle V B 40 6 mathrm L nbsp Then by equation 6d KD is 1 3334 10 07 m3 s or 8 00 mL min or 11 52 L d Kt V and the weekly Kt V by equations 7a and 7b respectively are thus 0 45978 and 1 9863 A simplified analysis of Kt V in PD edit On a practical level in peritoneal dialysis the calculation of Kt V is often relatively easy because the fluid drained is usually close to 100 saturated with urea citation needed i e the dialysate has equilibriated with the body Therefore the daily amount of plasma cleared is simply the drain volume divided by an estimate of the patient s volume of distribution As an example if someone is infusing four 2 liter exchanges a day and drains out a total of 9 liters per day then they drain 9 7 63 liters per week If the patient has an estimated total body water volume V of about 35 liters then the weekly Kt V would be 63 35 or about 1 8 The above calculation is limited by the fact that the serum concentration of urea is changing during dialysis So ideally this should not be used as it has not taken in account the urea level in dialysate or serum so it cannot be labelled as urea clearance In automated PD this change cannot be ignored thus blood samples are usually measured at some time point in the day and assumed to be representative of an average value The clearance is then calculated using this measurement Reason for adoption editKt V has been widely adopted because it was correlated with survival Before Kt V nephrologists measured the serum urea concentration specifically the time averaged concentration of urea TAC of urea which was found not to be correlated with survival due to its strong dependence on protein intake and thus deemed an unreliable marker of dialysis adequacy Criticisms disadvantages of Kt V editIt is complex and tedious to calculate Many nephrologists have difficulty understanding it Urea is not associated with toxicity 7 Kt V only measures a change in the concentration of urea and implicitly assumes the clearance of urea is comparable to other toxins It ignores molecules larger than urea having diffusion limited transport so called middle molecules Kt V does not take into account the role of ultrafiltration It ignores the mass transfer between body compartments and across the plasma membrane i e intracellular to extracellular transport which has been shown to be important for the clearance of molecules such as phosphate Practical use of Kt V requires adjustment for rebound of the urea concentration due to the multi compartmental nature of the body Kt V may disadvantage women and smaller patients in terms of the amount of dialysis received Normal kidney function may be modeled as optimal Glomerular filtration rate or GFR GFR is usually normalized in people to body surface area A man and a woman of similar body surface areas will have markedly different levels of total body water which corresponds to V Also smaller people of either sex will have markedly lower levels of V but only slightly lower levels of body surface area For this reason any dialysis dosing system that is based on V may tend to underdose smaller patients and women Some investigators have proposed dosing based on surface area S instead of V but clinicians usually measure the URR and then calculate Kt V One can adjust the Kt V to calculate a surface area normalized or SAN Kt V as well as a SAN standard Kt V This puts a wrapper around Kt V and normalizes it to body surface area 8 Importance of total weekly dialysis time and frequency edit Kt V has been criticized because quite high levels can be achieved particularly in smaller patients during relatively short dialysis sessions This is especially true for small people where adequate levels of Kt V often can be achieved over 2 to 2 5 hours One important part of dialysis adequacy has to do with adequate removal of salt and water and also of solutes other than urea especially larger molecular weight substances and phosphorus Phosphorus and similar molecular weights remain elusive to filtration of any degree A number of studies suggest that a longer amount of time on dialysis or more frequent dialysis sessions lead to better results There have been various alternative methods of measuring dialysis adequacy most of which have proposed some number based on Kt V and number of dialysis sessions per week e g the standardized Kt V or simply number of dialysis sessions per week squared multiplied by the hours on dialysis per session e g the hemodialysis product by Scribner and Oreopoulos 9 It is not practical to give long dialysis sessions greater than 4 5 hours thrice a week in a dialysis center during the day Longer sessions can be practically delivered if dialysis is done at home Most experience has been gained with such long dialysis sessions given at night Some centers are offering every other night or thrice a week nocturnal dialysis The benefits of giving more frequent dialysis sessions is also an area of active study and new easy to use machines are permitting easier use of home dialysis where 2 3 hour sessions can be given 4 7 days per week Kt V minimums and targets for hemodialysis edit One question in terms of Kt V is how much is enough The answer has been based on observational studies and the NIH funded HEMO trial done in the United States and also on kinetic analysis For a US perspective see the KDOQI clinical practice guidelines 10 and for a United Kingdom perspective see U K Renal Association clinical practice guidelines 11 According to the US guidelines for thrice a week dialysis a Kt V without rebound should be 1 2 at a minimum with a target value of 1 4 15 above the minimum values However there is suggestive evidence that larger amounts may need to be given to women smaller patients malnourished patients and patients with clinical problems The recommended minimum Kt V value changes depending on how many sessions per week are given and is reduced for patients who have a substantial degree of residual renal function Kt V minimums and targets for peritoneal dialysis edit For a US perspective see 12 For the United States the minimum weekly Kt V target used to be 2 0 This was lowered to 1 7 in view of the results of a large randomized trial done in Mexico the ADEMEX trial 13 and also from reanalysis of previous observational study results from the perspective of residual kidney function For a United Kingdom perspective see 14 This is still in draft form References edit Bonert M Saville BA 2010 A non dimensional analysis of hemodialysis Open Biomed Eng J 4 138 55 doi 10 2174 1874120701004010138 PMC 3111706 PMID 21673980 a b Gotch FA Sargent JA September 1985 A mechanistic analysis of the National Cooperative Dialysis Study NCDS Kidney Int 28 3 526 34 doi 10 1038 ki 1985 160 PMID 3934452 a b Clinical practice guidelines for nutrition in chronic renal failure K DOQI National Kidney Foundation Am J Kidney Dis 35 6 Suppl 2 S1 140 2000 doi 10 1053 ajkd 2000 v35 aajkd03517 PMID 10895784 Archived from the original on 2006 09 03 Babb AL Popovich RP Christopher TG Scribner BH 1971 The genesis of the square meter hour hypothesis Trans Am Soc Artif Intern Organs 17 81 91 PMID 5158139 Lysaght MJ Farrell PC 1989 Membrane Phenomena and mass transfer kinetics in peritoneal dialysis Journal of Membrane Science 44 1 5 33 doi 10 1016 S0376 7388 00 82339 X Lysaght MJ Pollock CA Hallet MD Ibels LS Farrell PC 1989 The relevance of urea kinetic modeling to CAPD ASAIO Trans 35 4 784 90 PMID 2611047 Johnson WJ Hagge WW Wagoner RD Dinapoli RP Rosevear JW January 1972 Effects of urea loading in patients with far advanced renal failure Mayo Clinic Proceedings 47 1 21 9 PMID 5008253 Daugirdas JT et al Surface area normalized SAN adjustment to Kt V and weekly standard Kt V J Am Soc Nephrol abstract 2006 and Appendix A Handbook of Dialysis 4th Edition Daugirdas JT Blake PB Ing TS editors Lippincott Williams and Wilkins Philadelphia 2007 Scribner BH Oreopoulos DG January 2002 The Hemodialysis Product HDP A Better Index of Dialysis Adequacy than Kt V PDF Dialysis amp Transplantation 31 1 13 5 Archived from the original mirrored PDF on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2007 02 07 KDOQI Hemodialysis Adequacy Archived 2007 02 11 at the Wayback Machine Update 2006 U K Renal Association Clinical Practice Guidelines 2006 Update Archived 2007 02 09 at the Wayback Machine KDOQI Peritoneal Adequacy Archived 2007 07 11 at the Wayback Machine Update 2006 Paniagua R Amato D Vonesh E et al May 2002 Effects of increased peritoneal clearances on mortality rates in peritoneal dialysis ADEMEX a prospective randomized controlled trial J Am Soc Nephrol 13 5 1307 20 doi 10 1681 ASN V1351307 PMID 11961019 U K Renal Association Clinical Practice Guidelines Peritoneal Dialysis Archived 2007 02 10 at the Wayback Machine 2006 Update External links editHemodialysis edit Hemodialysis Dose and Adequacy a description of URR and Kt V from the Kidney and Urologic Diseases Clearinghouse Kt V and the adequacy of hemodialysis UpToDate comPeritoneal dialysis edit Advisory on Peritoneal Dialysis American Association of Kidney Patients Peritoneal Dialysis Dose and Adequacy a description of URR and Kt V from the Kidney and Urologic Diseases Clearinghouse Calculators edit spKt V eKt V URR nPCR GNRI etc dialysis calculation hdtool net free Kt V calculators single pool and equilibrated HD PD no login needed site used by dozens of dialysis centers around the world for over 10 years kt v net Web javascript program that does formal 2 pool urea kinetics in multiple patients ureakinetics org Kt V calculator medindia com Kt V HDCN Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kt V amp oldid 1212799199, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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