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Proof of Concept of Adapted PD in Children (PC-AAPD)

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Primary Study Outcome: Sodium Clearance in Dialysis
Solute Removal
Ultrafiltration
Interventions
Other: Adapted double mini PET
Other: Standard double mini PET
Registration Number
NCT02748733
Lead Sponsor
Heidelberg University
Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to validate the concept of adapted automated PD a modified Peritoneal Equilibration Test (PET), will be performed in children on chronic PD. Instead of a single 4 hour standard dwell, two double mini PET using the same type and total volume of dialysate and the same total dwell time (150min) will be performed in randomised sequence. An double mini test consists of two identical dwells, reflecting routine PD, the other one of a short small dwell followed by a long, large dwell as suggested from adapted PD regimes successfully applied in adult PD patients.

Detailed Description

Present peritoneal dialysis treatment is hampered by the limited efficacy of currently applied regimen, mainly consisting of a series of standard dwells with the same amount of dialysate and dwell time. New cycler machines available for routine therapy now allow modification of time and volume of each dwell and thus to individually adapt PD regime. In fact a recent multi-center trial in adult patients suggests that a PD regimen consisting of a sequence of short small dwells followed by large and long lasting dwells in total applying the same amount of dialysate during the same total treatment time substantially improves fluid and toxin removal. Underlying beneficial mechanisms are highly debated. Prior to adaptation of such PD treatment patterns to children on automated PD in the routine clinical setting, the tolerability and biochemical effects need to be demonstrated.

To this end, the Peritoneal Equilibration Test (PET), which is routinely performed in children during a day hospital treatment to analyse peritoneal transport function, will be modified. Instead of a single 4 hour standard dwell, two double mini PET using the same type and total volume of dialysate and the same total dwell time (150min) will be performed in randomised sequence in a total of 15 stable pediatric PD patients treated in four different European pediatric dialysis centres. The conventional double mini PET consists of two identical cycles (fill volume 1 L/m², 75 min), the adapted one of a short, small cycle (0.6 mL/m² BSA, 30 min) followed by a long, large cycle (1.4 mL/m², 120 min). A total of 22 ml of blood will be drawn via a peripheral i.v. line, intraperitoneal pressure, in clinical routine controlled once during a PET, will be measured with each dwell.

The study analyses the time and volume dependent PD transport mechanisms. Patients included may benefit from the detailed analysis of peritoneal membrane function, allowing for optimisation of the individual PD prescription.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
15
Inclusion Criteria
  • PD patients 5-21 years of age
  • Stable PD
  • Last peritonitis > 4 weeks ago
Exclusion Criteria
  • Polyuria and dehydrated patients (as to the clinical status RR, HR and BCM) not allowing for more than 1.5% glucose content of PD fluid
  • Hypoalbuminemia (serum albumin < 25g/l)
  • Relevant changes in dialysis regime and diet the three days preceding the study
  • Hb < 9 mg/dl
  • Pregnancy
  • History of repeated hernia or PD fluid leakage
  • Intolerability of intraperitoneal pressure of up to 18 cm H2O at 1400ml/m²
  • BSA in supine position (e.g. due to organomegaly)
  • Any underlying diseases affecting the peritoneal membrane transport function (such as previous surgery with subsequent adhesions and fluid trapping, chronic bowl disease)
  • Heart insufficiency
  • Patients with catheter dysfunction, i.e. outflow problems (assessed by cycler alarms during the last 2 weeks)

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
CROSSOVER
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Adapted double mini PETAdapted double mini PETPET = Peritoneal Equilibration Test, a test routinely performed to measure peritoneal transport rates of solutes and water in peritoneal dialysis patients. To this end the routinely administered dialysis fluid is infused into the peritoneal cavity. The test will be modified (adapted): A short, small cycle (0.6 mL/m² BSA, 30 min) followed by a long, large cycle (1.4 mL/m², 120 min) will be performed in each patient and compared to a standard double mini PET.
Standard double mini PETStandard double mini PETThe Standard double mini PET consists of two identical cycles (fill volume 1 L/m², 75 min of dwell time)
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Dialytic sodium removal, i.e. the amount of sodium (mmol) per double mini PET (via ultrafiltration and diffusive sodium transport)2 x 150 min with one 1 hour inbetween each PET

two double mini PET each comprising 150 min of dialysis

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
dialytic water and solute removal, i.e. ultrafiltrate per double mini PET (ml/gram intraperitoneal glucose exposure), phosphate removal per dmPET (mmol); Kt/V, clearance of creatinine (ml/min*1.73m²), intraperitoneal pressure (cm water)2 x 150 min with one 1 hour inbetween each PET

two double mini PET each comprising 150 min of dialysis

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Center for Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine

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Heidelberg, BW, Germany

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