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REACTIVE OR PROACTIVE: WHICH IS BEST IN RENAL REPLACEMENT THERAPY PHOSPHATE CONTROL? Joanna Campion-Smith Gurudutta Venkatesha Molly McLaughlin Meeta Mallik.

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Presentation on theme: "REACTIVE OR PROACTIVE: WHICH IS BEST IN RENAL REPLACEMENT THERAPY PHOSPHATE CONTROL? Joanna Campion-Smith Gurudutta Venkatesha Molly McLaughlin Meeta Mallik."— Presentation transcript:

1 REACTIVE OR PROACTIVE: WHICH IS BEST IN RENAL REPLACEMENT THERAPY PHOSPHATE CONTROL? Joanna Campion-Smith Gurudutta Venkatesha Molly McLaughlin Meeta Mallik Patrick Davies On behalf of the Trent Renal Critical Care Network

2 Hypophosphataemia is common in critically ill patients Predisposed by: ◦ Malnutrition & inadequate body stores ◦ Sepsis ◦ Hyperventilation ◦ Glucose infusions Side effects include: ◦ Muscle weakness ◦ Myocardial dysfunction ◦ Encephalopathy

3 Background CRRT fluids: ◦ Bicarbonate-buffered solutions ◦ Containing:  Calcium  Magnesium  Sodium  Chloride  Lactate  Glucose  +/- Potassium But no phosphate

4 Maintenance of normophosphataemia A balancing act: Adequate phosphate removal Prevention of hypophosphataemia

5

6 Two possible solutions What happens in the UK? Straw poll of 9 UK PICUs: 7 bolus correct2 add to CRRT fluids Is one method better? Bolus phosphate correction Addition of phosphate to CRRT fluids

7 Phosphate stability in CRRT fluids Work by Wignell, McLaughlin & Davies from our unit (poster presentation at this meeting) Chemical stability of sodium glycerophosphate in CRRT fluids proven up to 48h Calcium and bicarbonate also stable

8 Aims Compare phosphate level stability in CRRT patients who had bolus correction vs continuous correction One previous paediatric study has suggested that continuous correction improves phosphate control (Santiago et al.)

9 Methods 2 PICUs ◦ Same CRRT machine & fluids ◦ Same CRRT protocols ◦ Different phosphate correction protocols

10 Methods Retrospective analysis of phosphate control of all patients who underwent CRRT during a 13 month period

11 Study population (n=21) Bolus group (n=10) Continuous correction group (n=11)

12 Demographics Age ◦ Mean: 3.4 years ◦ Range: 0 – 13.1 years Weight ◦ Mean: 14.8 kg ◦ Range: 2.8 – 48 kg CRRT duration ◦ Mean: 65.3 hours ◦ Range: 0.5 – 216 hours

13 Underlying diagnosis

14 Indications for CRRT

15 More hypophosphataemic episodes in the bolus group 147 12 hourly blood tests 57 episodes of hypophosphataemia 1 episode per 22.5 hours in the bolus group 1 episode per 31.3 hours in the continuous correction group p = 0.0019 29 in bolus group (38 normal) 23 in continuous correction group (57 normal)

16 More bolus patients hypophosphataemic at 24 hours Bolus group Continuous correction group % patients hypophosphataemic at 24 hours

17 Depth of hypophosphataemia greater in bolus group 0.65 mmol/l Bolus group 0.65 mmol/l Bolus group 0.77 mmol/l Continuous correction group 0.77 mmol/l Continuous correction group p = 0.036

18 Phosphate level mean variance Bolus group 0.0808 Bolus group 0.0808 Continuous correction group 0.0488 Continuous correction group 0.0488

19 Conclusions & Recommendations Continuous correction: ◦ Tighter phosphate control ◦ With fewer hypophosphataemic episodes No documented side effects in either group We recommend addition of phosphate to CRRT fluids

20 References Wignell A et al., Is the addition of Phosphate to Continuous Venous-Venous Haemofiltration fluids safe? (2011) Santiago MJ et al., Hypophosphataemia and phosphate supplementation during continuous renal replacement therapy in children. Kidney International (2009) 75, 312-316

21 QUESTIONS


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