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Title: Renal Replacement Therapies in Critical Care


1
Renal Replacement Therapies in Critical Care
  • Dr. Andrew Ferguson
  • Consultant in Intensive Care Medicine
    Anaesthesia
  • Craigavon Area Hospital, United Kingdom

2
Where are we - too many questions?
  • What therapy should we use?
  • When should we start it?
  • What are we trying to achieve?
  • How much therapy is enough?
  • When do we stop/switch?
  • Can we improve outcomes?

Does the literature help us?
3
Overview
  • Impact of Acute Kidney Injury in the ICU
  • Dose-outcome relationships IRRT v CRRT
  • Mechanisms of solute clearance
  • Therapies in brief
  • IRRT, CRRT Hybrid therapies e.g. SLEDD
  • Solute clearance with IRRT v CRRT v SLEDD
  • Extracorporeal blood purification in sepsis
  • Putting it together making a rational choice

4
AKI classification systems 1 RIFLE
5
AKI classification systems 2 AKIN
Stage Creatinine criteria Urine output criteria
1 1.5 - 2 x baseline (or rise gt 26.4 mmol/L) lt 0.5 ml/kg/hour for gt 6 hours
2 gt2 - 3 x baseline lt 0.5 ml/kg/hour for gt 12 hours
3 gt 3 x baseline (or gt 354 mmol/L with acute rise gt 44 mmol/L) lt 0.3 ml/kg/hour for 24 hours or anuria for 12 hours
Patients receiving RRT are Stage 3 regardless of
creatinine or urine output
6
Acute Kidney Injury in the ICU
  • AKIis common 3-35 of admissions
  • AKI is associated with increased mortality
  • Minor rises in Cr associated with worse outcome
  • AKI developing after ICU admission (late) is
    associated with worse outcome than AKI at
    admission (APACHE underestimates ROD)
  • AKI requiring RRT occurs in about 4-5 of ICU
    admissions and is associated with worst mortality
    risk

Brivet, FG et al. Crit Care Med 1996 24
192-198 Metnitz, PG et al. Crit Care Med 2002
30 2051-2058
7
Mortality by AKI Severity (1)
Clermont, G et al. Kidney International 2002 62
986-996
8
Mortality by AKI Severity (2)
Bagshaw, S et al. Am J Kidney Dis 2006 48
402-409
9
RRT for Acute Renal Failure
  • There is some evidence for a relationship between
    higher therapy dose and better outcome, at least
    up to a point
  • This is true for IHD and for CVVH
  • There is no definitive evidence for superiority
    of one therapy over another, and wide practice
    variation exists
  • Accepted indications for RTT vary
  • No definitive evidence on timing of RRT

Schiffl, H et al. NEJM 2002 346 305-310
Ronco, C et al. Lancet 2000 355 26-30
Uchino, S. Curr Opin Crit Care 2006 12 538-543
10
Therapy Dose in IRRT
p 0.01
p 0.001
Schiffl, H et al. NEJM 2002 346 305-310
11
Therapy Dose in CVVH
45 ml/kg/hr
35 ml/kg/hr
25 ml/kg/hr
Ronco, C et al. Lancet 2000 355 26-30
12
Outcome with IRRT vs CRRT (1)
  • Trial quality low many non-randomized
  • Therapy dosing variable
  • Illness severity variable or details missing
  • Small numbers
  • Uncontrolled technique, membrane
  • Definitive trial would require 660 patients in
    each arm!
  • Unvalidated instrument for sensitivity analysis

there is insufficient evidence to establish
whether CRRT is associated with improved survival
in critically ill patients with ARF when compared
with IRRT
Kellum, J et al. Intensive Care Med 2002 28
29-37
13
Outcome with IRRT vs CRRT (2)
  • No mortality difference between therapies
  • No renal recovery difference between therapies
  • Unselected patient populations
  • Majority of studies were unpublished

Tonelli, M et al. Am J Kidney Dis 2002 40
875-885
14
Outcome with IRRT vs CRRT (3)
Vinsonneau, S et al. Lancet 2006 368 379-385
15
Proposed Indications for RRT
  • Oliguria lt 200ml/12 hours
  • Anuria lt 50 ml/12 hours
  • Hyperkalaemia gt 6.5 mmol/L
  • Severe acidaemia pH lt 7.0
  • Uraemia gt 30 mmol/L
  • Uraemic complications
  • Dysnatraemias gt 155 or lt 120 mmol/L
  • Hyper/(hypo)thermia
  • Drug overdose with dialysable drug

Lameire, N et al. Lancet 2005 365 417-430
16
Implications of the available data
17
The Ideal Renal Replacement Therapy
  • Allows control of intra/extravascular volume
  • Corrects acid-base disturbances
  • Corrects uraemia effectively clears toxins
  • Promotes renal recovery
  • Improves survival
  • Is free of complications
  • Clears drugs effectively (?)

18
Solute Clearance - Diffusion
  • Small (lt 500d) molecules cleared efficiently
  • Concentration gradient critical
  • Gradient achieved by countercurrent flow
  • Principal clearance mode of dialysis techniques

19
Solute Clearance Ultrafiltration Convection
(Haemofiltration)
  • Water movement drags solute across membrane
  • At high UF rates (gt 1L/hour) enough solute is
    dragged to produce significant clearance
  • Convective clearance dehydrates the blood passing
    through the filter
  • If filtration fraction gt 30 there is high risk
    of filter clotting
  • Also clears larger molecular weight substances
    (e.g. B12, TNF, inulin)

In post-dilution haemofiltration
20
Major Renal Replacement Techniques
Intermittent
Continuous
Hybrid
IHD Intermittent haemodialysis
SLEDD Sustained (or slow) low efficiency daily
dialysis
CVVH Continuous veno-venous haemofiltration
IUF Isolated Ultrafiltration
CVVHD Continuous veno-venous haemodialysis
SLEDD-F Sustained (or slow) low efficiency daily
dialysis with filtration
CVVHDF Continuous veno-venous haemodiafiltration
SCUF Slow continuous ultrafiltration
21
Intermittent Therapies - PRO
22
Intermittent Therapies - CON
23
Intradialytic Hypotension Risk Factors
  • LVH with diastolic dysfunction or LV systolic
    dysfunction / CHF
  • Valvular heart disease
  • Pericardial disease
  • Poor nutritional status / hypoalbuminaemia
  • Uraemic neuropathy or autonomic dysfunction
  • Severe anaemia
  • High volume ultrafiltration requirements
  • Predialysis SBP of lt100 mm Hg
  • Age 65 years
  • Pressor requirement

24
Managing Intra-dialytic Hypotension
  • Dialysate temperature modelling
  • Low temperature dialysate
  • Dialysate sodium profiling
  • Hypertonic Na at start decreasing to 135 by end
  • Prevents plasma volume decrease
  • Midodrine if not on pressors
  • UF profiling
  • Colloid/crystalloid boluses
  • Sertraline (longer term HD)

2005 National Kidney Foundation K/DOQI GUIDELINES
25
Continuous Therapies - PRO
26
Continuous Therapies - CON
27
SCUF
  • High flux membranes
  • Up to 24 hrs per day
  • Objective VOLUME control
  • Not suitable for solute clearance
  • Blood flow 50-200 ml/min
  • UF rate 2-8 ml/min

28
CA/VVH
  • Extended duration up to weeks
  • High flux membranes
  • Mainly convective clearance
  • UF gt volume control amount
  • Excess UF replaced
  • Replacement pre- or post-filter
  • Blood flow 50-200 ml/min
  • UF rate 10-60 ml/min

29
CA/VVHD
  • Mid/high flux membranes
  • Extended period up to weeks
  • Diffusive solute clearance
  • Countercurrent dialysate
  • UF for volume control
  • Blood flow 50-200 ml/min
  • UF rate 1-8 ml/min
  • Dialysate flow 15-60 ml/min

30
CVVHDF
  • High flux membranes
  • Extended period up to weeks
  • Diffusive convective solute
  • clearance
  • Countercurrent dialysate
  • UF exceeds volume control
  • Replacement fluid as required
  • Blood flow 50-200 ml/min
  • UF rate 10-60 ml/min
  • Dialysate flow 15-30 ml/min
  • Replacement 10-30 ml/min

31
SLED(D) SLED(D)-F Hybrid therapy
  • Conventional dialysis equipment
  • Online dialysis fluid preparation
  • Excellent small molecule detoxification
  • Cardiovascular stability as good as CRRT
  • Reduced anticoagulation requirement
  • 11 hrs SLED comparable to 23 hrs CVVH
  • Decreased costs compared to CRRT
  • Phosphate supplementation required

Fliser, T Kielstein JT. Nature Clin Practice
Neph 2006 2 32-39
Berbece, AN Richardson, RMA. Kidney
International 2006 70 963-968
32
Kinetic Modelling of Solute Clearance
CVVH (predilution) Daily IHD SLED
Urea TAC (mg/ml) 40.3 64.6 43.4
Urea EKR (ml/min) 33.8 21.1 31.3
Inulin TAC (mg/L) 25.4 55.5 99.4
Inulin EKR (ml/min) 11.8 5.4 3.0
b2 microglobulin TAC (mg/L) 9.4 24.2 40.3
b2 microglobulin EKR (ml/min) 18.2 7.0 4.2
TAC time-averaged concentration (from area
under concentration-time curve) EKR equivalent
renal clearance Inulin represents middle molecule
and b2 microglobulin large molecule. CVVH has
marked effects on middle and large molecule
clearance not seen with IHD/SLED SLED and CVVH
have equivalent small molecule clearance Daily
IHD has acceptable small molecule clearance
Liao, Z et al. Artificial Organs 2003 27 802-807
33
Uraemia Control
Liao, Z et al. Artificial Organs 2003 27 802-807
34
Large molecule clearance
Liao, Z et al. Artificial Organs 2003 27 802-807
35
Comparison of IHD and CVVH
John, S Eckardt K-U. Seminars in Dialysis 2006
19 455-464
36
Beyond renal replacementRRT as blood
purification therapy
37
Extracorporeal Blood Purification Therapy (EBT)
Intermittent
Continuous
TPE Therapeutic plasma exchange
HVHF High volume haemofiltration
UHVHF Ultra-high volume haemofiltration
PHVHF Pulsed high volume haemofiltration
CPFA Coupled plasma filtration and adsorption
38
Peak Concentration Hypothesis
  • Removes cytokines from blood compartment during
    pro-inflammatory phase of sepsis
  • Assumes blood cytokine level needs to fall
  • Assumes reduced free cytokine levels leads to
    decreased tissue effects and organ failure
  • Favours therapy such as HVHF, UHVHF, CPFA
  • But tissue/interstitial cytokine levels unknown

Ronco, C Bellomo, R. Artificial Organs 2003
27 792-801
39
Threshold Immunomodulation Hypothesis
  • More dynamic view of cytokine system
  • Mediators and pro-mediators removed from blood to
    alter tissue cytokine levels but blood level does
    not need to fall
  • ? pro-inflammatory processes halted when
    cytokines fall to threshold level
  • We dont know when such a point is reached

Honore, PM Matson, JR. Critical Care Medicine
2004 32 896-897
40
Mediator Delivery Hypothesis
  • HVHF with high incoming fluid volumes (3-6
    L/hour) increases lymph flow 20-40 times
  • Drag of mediators and cytokines with lymph
  • Pulls cytokines from tissues to blood for removal
    and tissue levels fall
  • High fluid exchange is key

Di Carlo, JV Alexander, SR. Int J Artif Organs
2005 28 777-786
41
High Volume Hemofiltration
  • May reduce unbound fraction of cytokines
  • Removes
  • endothelin-I (causes early pulm hypertension in
    sepsis)
  • endogenous cannabinoids (vasoplegic in sepsis)
  • myodepressant factor
  • PAI-I so may eventually reduce DIC
  • Reduces post-sepsis immunoparalysis (CARS)
  • Reduces inflammatory cell apoptosis
  • Human trials probably using too low a dose (40
    ml/kg/hour vs 100 ml/kg/hour in animals)

42
CRRT, Haemodynamics Outcome
  • 114 unstable (pressors or MAP lt 60) patients
  • 55 stable (no pressors or MAP gt 60) patients
  • Responders 20 fall in NA requirement or 20
    rise in MAP (without change in NA)
  • Overall responder mortality 30, non-responder
    mortality 74.7 (p lt 0.001)
  • In unstable patients responder mortality 30 vs
    non-responder mortality 87 (p lt 0.001)
  • Haemodynamic improvement after 24 hours CRRT is a
    strong predictor of outcome

Herrera-Gutierrez, ME et al. ASAIO Journal 2006
52 670-676
43
Common Antibiotics and CRRT
These effects will be even more dramatic with HVHF
Honore, PM et al. Int J Artif Organs 2006 29
649-659
44
Towards Targeted Therapy?
Non-septic ARF
Septic ARF
Cathecholamine resistant septic shock
Daily IHD
Daily IHD?
HVHF 60-120 ml/kg/hour for 96 hours
Daily SLEDD
Daily SLEDD?
CVVHD/F ? dose
EBT
PHVHF 60-120 ml/kg/hour for 6-8 hours then CVVH gt
35 ml/kg/hour
CVVH gt 35ml/kg/hour ? 50-70 ml/kg/hour
CVVH _at_ 35ml/kg/hour
Cerebral oedema
Honore, PM et al. Int J Artif Organs 2006 29
649-659
45
You should listen to your heart, and not the
voices in your head
Marge Simpson
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