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"In this review, we discuss common challenges at the interface between dialysis access planning, prognostication, and patient-centered decision making" Gelfand et al (2023).

Vascular access considerations in kidney palliative care

Abstract:

In this review, we discuss common challenges at the interface between dialysis access planning, prognostication, and patient-centered decision making. Particularly for patients whose survival benefit from dialysis is attenuated by advanced age or other serious illness, knowing the potential complications and anticipated frequency of access procedures is essential for patients and families to be able to conceptualize what life on dialysis will look like. Although starting dialysis with a functioning graft or fistula is associated with reduced infection rates, mortality, hospitalizations, and cost compared with a central venous catheter, these benefits must be weighed against the chance that early access placement in an elderly or seriously ill patient is an unnecessary surgery because the chronic kidney disease never progresses, the patient dies before developing an indication to start dialysis, or, the patient prefers conservative kidney management over dialysis. Kidney palliative care is a growing subspecialty of nephrology focused on helping seriously ill patients navigate complex medical decisions, and may be useful for intensive goals-of-care discussions about treatment and access options for patients with limited anticipated survival because of age or other serious illness.


Reference:

Gelfand SL, Hentschel DM. Dialysis Access Considerations in Kidney Palliative Care. Semin Nephrol. 2023 Aug 12;43(1):151397. doi: 10.1016/j.semnephrol.2023.151397. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 37579517.