Water and small solute excretion in continuous peritoneal dialysis patients with lean body mass exceeding 90% of body weight as estimated from creatinine kinetics.

Journal: The International Journal Of Artificial Organs
Published:
Abstract

Lean body mass computed from creatinine kinetics (LBM) is an index of somatic nutrition and correlates with other nutrition indices in CAPD. However, LBM exceeding 90% of body weight (LBM/W > or = 0.9) may be an index of non-compliance, rather than nutrition. To test this hypothesis, we analyzed fluid and solute excretion in 40 CAPD patients with LBM/W > or = 0.9 (group A). The comparison group (group B) consisted of 885 CAPD patients with LBM/W < 0.9. Group A was younger (38.3+/-14.8 vs 54.7+/-14.7 yr) and had a lower percent of women (23.5% vs 41.1%) and diabetic subjects (17.5% vs 42.6%) than group B (at P < or = 0.019). Group A also had lower body mass index (22.7+/-2.7 vs 25.8+/-5.1 kg/m2, P <0.001) and serum albumin (33.0+/-6.7 vs 35.2+/-5.5 g/L, P = 0.014). Despite similar prescribed daily fill volumes (group A 8.3+/-2.4, group B 8.5+/-2.2 L/24 h) and similar D/P urea and creatinine values, group A had higher daily drain volume (11.0+/-3.6 vs 9.6+/-2.1 L/24 h, P < 0.001). Renal clearances were similar, while peritoneal and total clearances were apparently higher in group A. Creatinine excretion was higher in group A (27.4+/-5.1 vs 13.6+/-4.1 mg/kg x 24 h, P < 0.001), with a large part of the excess creatinine excretion in group A being accounted for by peritoneal excretion. The combination of an apparently high daily ultrafiltration volume (2.7 L/24 h on the average), unrealistically high creatinine excretion rate, and relatively poor nutrition (low body mass index and serum albumin) in group A is consistent with non-compliance. We suggest that the finding of LBM/W > or = 0.9 during a clearance study in CAPD should trigger an investigation for non-compliance.

Authors
A Tzamaloukas, G Murata