Citric Acid–Containing Dialysate and Survival Rate in the Dialysis Outcomes and Practice Patterns Study
Author(s) -
Pablo Ureña-Torres,
Brian Bieber,
Fitsum GuebreEgziabher,
Rim Ossman,
Michel Jadoul,
Masaaki Inaba,
Bruce Robinson,
Friedrich K. Port,
Christian Jacquelinet,
Christian Combe
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
kidney360
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2641-7650
DOI - 10.34067/kid.0006182020
Subject(s) - citric acid , dialysis , medicine , hemodialysis , bicarbonate , metabolic acidosis , intensive care medicine , proportional hazards model , biochemistry , chemistry
Metabolic acidosis is a common threat for patients on hemodialysis, managed by alkaline dialysate. The main base is bicarbonate, to which small amounts of acetic, citric, or hydrochloric acid are added. The first two are metabolized to bicarbonate, mostly by the liver. Citric acid-containing dialysate might improve dialysis efficiency, anticoagulation, calcification propensity score, and intradialytic hemodynamic stability. However, a recent report from the French dialysis registry suggested this dialysate increases mortality risk. This prompted us to assess whether citric acid-containing bicarbonate-based dialysate was associated with mortality in the international Dialysis Outcomes and Practice Patterns Study (DOPPS).
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