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Coffee is the most consumed drink worldwide, sometimes needed to boost energy and other times to entertain social connectivity. Caffeine is mostly present unbound in the plasma, only 10 to 30% of caffeine binds to plasma proteins. It is distributed freely into the intracellular space, and it has a small distribution volume. Therefore, caffeine can pass through the dialysis membrane during a standard hemodialysis session. In hemodialysis patients, headache occurs in 40 to 75% of patients. Some authors have suggested that one of the reasons of headache during hemodialysis is caffeine withdrawal. This trial aims to find whether coffee intake during hemodialysis reduces the headache episodes. It is a randomized double blind multicenter trial where 160 patients will be randomized to 2 groups: group 1 of 80 patients will be given a cup of coffee each dialysis session for 4 weeks and group 2 will receive decaffeinated coffee each dialysis session for 4 weeks.
Full description
Coffee is the most consumed drink worldwide, sometimes needed to boost energy and other times to entertain social connectivity. It is known also to cause addiction and thus be a cause for withdrawal symptoms such as headache and irritability. Coffee is not contra-indicated in patients with chronic kidney disease. Caffeine is mostly present unbound in the plasma, only 10 to 30% of caffeine binds to plasma proteins. It is distributed freely into the intracellular space, and it has a small distribution volume within the body around 0,7L/kg. Therefore, caffeine can pass through the dialysis membrane during a standard hemodialysis session. In hemodialysis patients, intra-dialytic hypotension, fatigue post-dialysis and headache occur in 40 to 75% of patients. Some authors have suggested that one of the reasons of headache during hemodialysis is caffeine withdrawal.
This trial aims to find out whether coffee consumption during dialysis could decrease headache episodes.
Methods
Study setting All patients on chronic hemodialysis in three Lebanese dialysis units, Saint-Georges Ajaltoun hospital, Hôtel-Dieu de France and Bellevue Medical Center will be included.
Trial design and participants This is a randomized, controlled, double-blind, multi-center clinical trial. Patients will be randomized to one of two arms and then group one will receive the coffee during hemodialysis session and group two will receive decaffeinated coffee.
Blinding will be ensured by designating an external employee that will hold the cups of coffee to the unit's nurses every day with the name of each patient on the cup.
Randomization Patients will be assigned to receive coffee during hemodialysis or not using a 1:1 allocation ratio.
Interventions Patients will be randomly assigned to one of two groups: Group 1 will receive a cup of coffee (80 cc) in the middle of the dialysis session every session for 4 weeks. Group 2 will receive non-caffeinated cup of coffee (80 cc) in the middle of the dialysis session every session for 4 weeks. The coffee that will be used is the boiled unfiltered Arabica coffee with a ratio of water to coffee of 800 ml/125 g. Patients can add sugar to their coffee if they want. Ultrafiltration rate will not exceed 13 mL//kg/hour for all included patients.
Participant timeline Every patient will be followed from first day of randomization till the end of the month (4 weeks follow-up).
Sample size calculation If we consider a two-sided alpha of 5% and power of 90% and a prevalence of headache in the dialysis population up to 75% that will be reduced by 25% in the group taking caffeine, the total sample size needed would be 160 patients, 80 in each arm.
Data collection
Variables that will be collected include:
Statistical analysis Continuous variables will be presented as mean ± standard deviation (SD) and categorical variables as percentages. The effectiveness of the randomization will be checked by comparing baseline variables with the appropriate tests.
The analysis will depend on the distribution of the outcome variables:
If outcome variables are normally or quasi-normally distributed, Hotelling's T-Squared will be used as an overall multivariate test for the difference between the 2 groups, followed by t-tests to assess individual outcomes.
If outcome variables are skewed, the Mann-Whitney test will be used. Bonferroni correction will be used to adjust for multiple comparisons. A P-value of ≤0.05 is considered statistically significant.
Definitions Hypotensive episodes are defined as drop of systolic blood pressure below 90 mmHg or of 20 mmHg accompanied with clinical symptoms such as muscle cramps, chest pain, dyspnea, dizziness, headache, abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, weakness, anxiety, paleness and sweating. Hypotensive episodes during dialysis usually occur in 15-30% of cases.
Irritability and energy will be assessed based on two questions:
Insomnia will be assessed by two questions: have you any difficulty sleeping at night? (yes/no), how many hours do you sleep at night?
Ethical approval The study will get approval from the ethics committee of Saint-Joseph University and is in agreement with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975.
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156 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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