Evaluation of the Effect of Cooled Haemodialysis on Cognitive Function in Patients Suffering With End-stage KD
NCT ID: NCT03645733
Last Updated: 2020-02-11
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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UNKNOWN
NA
90 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2017-12-20
2020-10-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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High rates of cognitive impairment in dialysis patients are poorly understood Increasing severity of Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) is associated with a graded increase in prevalence of cognitive impairment and decrease in brain perfusion independent of vascular risk factors. Diagnostic methods vary but recent reviews summarise at least moderate cognitive impairment in 30-70% of dialysis patients. Cognitive impairment in haemodialysis patients is independently associated with higher rates of depression and mortality. To date, no interventions are proven to slow cognitive decline and this poorly understood association was recently reviewed. Co-segregation of atherosclerotic risk factors, cannot entirely account for excess risk. There are multiple factors CKD and haemodialysis specific factors including oxidative stress, malnutrition and inflammation. Haemodialysis allows accumulation of several neurotoxins that reduce brain perfusion and blood-brain barrier integrity.
Intradialytic hypotension is implicated in excessive cognitive impairment Haemodialysis involves cycles of removing varying volumes of fluid, electrolytes and toxins that accumulate between treatments. Hypotension partially results from fluid removal rates exceeding plasma refill rates. Ubiquitous left ventricular hypertrophy and aortic stiffness further lower the threshold for haemodialysis to inflict recurrent multi-organ ischemia-reperfusion injury. Haemodialysis might cause worsening of cognitive impairment by inducing haemodynamic instability, fluid shifts, cerebral ischaemia or cerebral oedema. Intradialytic hypotension is common affecting 30-40% of treatments and is consistently associated with at least a 30% increase in mortality and reduced quality-of-life. These dynamic changes in Blood Pressure (BP) and perfusion might be associated with altered cognition but the data are sparse and conflicting, possibly reflecting differences in study design; such as different methods and timings for cognitive assessments. Several small studies show cognitive function is best immediately before haemodialysis, worse during haemodialysis and improves the day after with a possible link to sudden fluid removal . Our own experience, using the Montreal Cognitive Assessment in 100 haemodialysis patients also showed cognitive decline during haemodialysis. A recent retrospective study of 121,000 patients report that peritoneal dialysis is associated with a 26% lesser-adjusted risk of newly diagnosed dementia compared to haemodialysis. One plausible mechanism of that benefit is that peritoneal dialysis does not cause sudden reductions in blood pressure.
Absence of intradialytic hypotension is emerging as a novel treatment goal 30. One possible way to prevent hypotension is to increase treatment time or frequency to allow more gentle fluid removal. A clinical trial of 245 patients showed 6 times weekly haemodialysis improved physical health scores whilst reducing intradialytic hypotension, fluid gains and left ventricular mass. A preliminary repeated measures study of 12 patients showed extended overnight haemodialysis was associated with improved cognitive function scores. These data are encouraging but come at the expense of increased treatment complications, cost and are currently unfeasible in most UK centres and worldwide. The use of cooler dialysate (34-35°C) to prevent intradialytic hypotension was first described in 1981. However, this therapy remains greatly underused because of perceptions about thermal symptoms. Cooler dialysate doesn't necessarily lower core-temperature and it is thought to prevent intradialytic hypotension by preventing a rise in core temperature and subsequent systemic vasodilation. A recent systematic review of cooler dialysate analyzed 26 trials in 484 patients. Compared with standard temperature dialysis, cooler dialysis reduced the rate of intradialytic hypotension by 70% (95% CI, 49-89%). Confidence in the estimates was limited by small sample sizes, attrition and a lack of appropriate blinding with no trial reporting long-term outcomes. A recent RfPB grant funded pilot clinical trial in 38 patients, showed lower temperature of dialysis fluid prevented the progression of ischemic brain white matter changes after one year which appeared to be linked to hemodynamic stability. The same trial also reported cooler dialysis fluid improved cardiac structure and function .
The effects of cooler dialysate on cognitive impairment, quality-of-life and illness burden have not been robustly tested or are not known. How well tolerated cooler dialysis fluid is also not well reported. A recent editorial called for larger trials using this cheap and universally applicable intervention that focused on these patient important outcomes. The current low usage of cooler dialysate in the UK affords an opportunity to definitively test this simple modification to haemodialysis as a potential intervention to prevent cognitive dysfunction and quality-of-life. There are several uncertainties around study design of a definitive trial of cooler dialysate and cognitive impairment, hence the need to formally assess these in a feasibility study.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
PREVENTION
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Control Group
The control group will be at the standard dialysate temperature of 36.5 °C (which is the standard of care in the sites), 3 times a week for 12 months
No interventions assigned to this group
Lower Temperature Group
These patients will receive haemodialysis with a dialysate temperature of 35 degree centigrade. The intervention group will start off using a dialysate temperature that is 36 °C. Thereafter the dialysate temperature will be reduced every two week by 0.5 °C until 35 °C or the lowest tolerated temperature reached. Patients who would fail to tolerate the temperature of 35 °C, the lowest tolerated temperature will be carried over to the end of the study.
Lower Temperature Group
Dialysate temperature of 35 degree centigrade. The intervention group will start off using a dialysate temperature that is 36 °C. Thereafter the dialysate temperature will be reduced every two week by 0.5 °C until 35 °C or the lowest tolerated temperature reached.
Caregivers
Patients, who consent for the study, will be asked to identify the most suitable carer to participate in the study who could be approach in person, over the phone or by post as deemed suitable by the research team and convenient by the carer. Patient's permission to contact their identified carer will be recorded. Carers of consenting patients will be approached in the same manner as above after obtaining patients consent to contact their carers. Patients will still be able to take part in the study even if their carer declines consent.
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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Lower Temperature Group
Dialysate temperature of 35 degree centigrade. The intervention group will start off using a dialysate temperature that is 36 °C. Thereafter the dialysate temperature will be reduced every two week by 0.5 °C until 35 °C or the lowest tolerated temperature reached.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. Receiving haemodialysis three (3) times per week for ESKD, for at least 3 months
3. Having proven mental capacity to understand the study and give informed consent
Exclusion Criteria
2. Receiving Acetylcholine Esterase Inhibitors
3. Receiving antipsychotic or antidepressants unless stable on treatment for at least 6 weeks
4. Current participation in a study of an investigational medicinal product
5. Inter-current infection
6. An operation date for a living donor kidney transplant within the period of the trial
7. Patients expected to survive less than 1 year according to the treating nephrologist
8. Patients prone to intra-dialytic hypotension or cardiovascular instability during haemodialysis according to the treating nephrologist
9. Patients who are currently taking triptans, dopamine antagonists, tramadol, sedative and opioid analgesics
10. Patients who have a known diagnosis or have other psychiatric conditions, including severe depression, bipolar affective disorder, severe anxiety, panic disorder, substance misuse or psychosis.
11. Currently involved in another intervention study
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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National Institute for Health Research, United Kingdom
OTHER_GOV
Heart of England NHS Trust
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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George Tadros, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University Hospital Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust
Locations
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Birmingham Heartlands Hospital
Birmingham, West Midlands, United Kingdom
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Liz Adey
Role: primary
References
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Dasgupta I, Odudu A, Baharani J, Fergusson N, Griffiths H, Harrison J, Hameed A, Maruff P, Ryan L, Thomas N, Woodhall G, Tadros G. Evaluation of effect of cooled haemodialysis on cognition in patients with end-stage kidney disease (ECHECKED) feasibility randomised controlled trial results. BMC Nephrol. 2024 Dec 19;25(1):466. doi: 10.1186/s12882-024-03883-6.
Kulkarni M, Prabhu AR, Rao IR, Nagaraju SP. Interventions for preventing haemodialysis dysequilibrium syndrome. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2024 May 22;5(5):CD015526. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD015526.pub2.
Dasgupta I, Odudu A, Baharani J, Fergusson N, Griffiths H, Harrison J, Maruff P, Thomas GN, Woodhall G, Youseff S, Tadros G. Evaluation of the effect of Cooled HaEmodialysis on Cognitive function in patients suffering with end-stage KidnEy Disease (E-CHECKED): feasibility randomised control trial protocol. Trials. 2020 Sep 30;21(1):820. doi: 10.1186/s13063-020-04725-0.
Other Identifiers
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2017054MH
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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