» Articles » PMID: 36731611

Home Dialysis: Conclusions from a Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) Controversies Conference

Overview
Journal Kidney Int
Publisher Elsevier
Specialty Nephrology
Date 2023 Feb 2
PMID 36731611
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Home dialysis modalities (home hemodialysis [HD] and peritoneal dialysis [PD]) are associated with greater patient autonomy and treatment satisfaction compared with in-center modalities, yet the level of home-dialysis use worldwide is low. Reasons for limited utilization are context-dependent, informed by local resources, dialysis costs, access to healthcare, health system policies, provider bias or preferences, cultural beliefs, individual lifestyle concerns, potential care-partner time, and financial burdens. In May 2021, KDIGO (Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes) convened a controversies conference on home dialysis, focusing on how modality choice and distribution are determined and strategies to expand home-dialysis use. Participants recognized that expanding use of home dialysis within a given health system requires alignment of policy, fiscal resources, organizational structure, provider incentives, and accountability. Clinical outcomes across all dialysis modalities are largely similar, but for specific clinical measures, one modality may have advantages over another. Therefore, choice among available modalities is preference-sensitive, with consideration of quality of life, life goals, clinical characteristics, family or care-partner support, and living environment. Ideally, individuals, their care-partners, and their healthcare teams will employ shared decision-making in assessing initial and subsequent kidney failure treatment options. To meet this goal, iterative, high-quality education and support for healthcare professionals, patients, and care-partners are priorities. Everyone who faces dialysis should have access to home therapy. Facilitating universal access to home dialysis and expanding utilization requires alignment of policy considerations and resources at the dialysis-center level, with clear leadership from informed and motivated clinical teams.

Citing Articles

Mission P(D)ossible: peritoneal dialysis in difficult cases.

Lehmann K, Reubke B, Wanninger R, Lindgren M, Glowka T, Kielstein J Clin Kidney J. 2025; 18(2):sfae403.

PMID: 39968508 PMC: 11833709. DOI: 10.1093/ckj/sfae403.


Home Dialysis Prediction Using Artificial Intelligence.

Monaghan C, Willetts J, Han H, Chaudhuri S, Ficociello L, Kraus M Kidney Med. 2025; 7(2):100949.

PMID: 39926030 PMC: 11803218. DOI: 10.1016/j.xkme.2024.100949.


How does organisational culture facilitate uptake of home dialysis? An ethnographic study of kidney centres in England.

Allen K, Shaw K, Spry J, Dikomitis L, Coyle D, Damery S BMJ Open. 2024; 14(12):e085754.

PMID: 39732481 PMC: 11683977. DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-085754.


Peritoneal Dialysis Modality Choice: Not an Automated Decision.

McGrath A, Perl J, Brown E Clin J Am Soc Nephrol. 2024; .

PMID: 39665583 PMC: 11835191. DOI: 10.2215/CJN.0000000627.


Assessing global and regional public interest in home dialysis modalities from 2004 to 2024.

Thongprayoon C, Wathanavasin W, Suppadungsuk S, Davis P, Miao J, Mao M Front Nephrol. 2024; 4:1489180.

PMID: 39606580 PMC: 11599256. DOI: 10.3389/fneph.2024.1489180.