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Combining Bioimpedance and Blood Volume Measurements in Haemodialysis

T

The Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Haemodialysis Complication

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03851185
RL18/109517

Details and patient eligibility

About

Around 60,000 patients in the UK are being treated for severe kidney failure. The most common treatment is haemodialysis (HD). An important part of HD is removing extra fluid from the body which the kidneys normally remove in urine. Deciding how much fluid to remove is not easy. It is normally based on clinical signs, such as blood pressure or tissue swollen with fluid, but there is a need for better tests to help guide these decisions.

Bioimpedance tests are one way of measuring fluid status. They involve passing a small electric current through tissue using stickers on the skin. The test is portable, cheap, simple, painless and harmless. One bioimpedance device, the Body Composition Monitor (BCM), has been designed particularly for kidney patients. However the BCM measures fluid in the whole body and cannot tell us how much fluid is in the blood (the blood volume), which has the biggest effect on patients' health.

The aim of this study is to see whether blood volume measurements can help to make fluid management more individualised. This could reduce the impact of dialysis on patients' health and improve patients' experience of the treatment.

Objective 1: To demonstrate whether the addition of blood volume measurements can help to tailor fluid management to HD patients' individual needs. In particular we will look at how body size, nutritional state, age and localised fluid can affect patients' blood volume.

Objective 2: To see if there is a simple way of making blood volume measurements with no need for expertise or extra equipment.

It is planned to recruit 40 patients into 4 clinically different groups and compare results between them.

The results will be compared between groups to help us understand how decisions about fluid management can be tailored to keep blood volume at the optimal level.

Enrollment

160 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 100 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Cohort 1 - Reference group: This group is intended to represent HD patients who have normal fluid status and normal compartmental fluid volumes.

Inclusion criteria:

  • Ultrafiltration volumes in the preceding two weeks of less than 0.5 litres;
  • pre-HD BCM-measured OH <1.1 litres; pre-HD blood pressure <140/90.

Cohort 2 - High BMI group: This group is intended to represent patients with high BMI who routinely finish dialysis with significant fluid depletion, as defined by BCM, without intradialytic symptoms.

Inclusion criteria:

  • BMI>30 with target weight > 1.1 kg below normally hydrated weight;
  • no recorded symptoms related to fluid removal in the preceding 2 weeks.

Cohort 3 - Low LTI group: This group is intended to represent patients who have a low LTI and who routinely finish dialysis with a degree of excess fluid as defined by BCM.

Inclusion criteria:

  • LTI < 10kg/m2 with target weight > 1.1 kg above normally hydrated weight.

Cohort 4 - Localised oedema group: This group is intended to represent patients who have localised lower limb oedema.

Inclusion criteria:

  • Oedema as defined by pitting

Trial contacts and locations

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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