Title: Vascular access for haemodialysis in Scotland
1Vascular access for haemodialysis in Scotland
- Alison Severn, Jan Kerssens and Keith Simpson
- on behalf of the Scottish Renal Registry
2Background
- The best form of vascular access is a native
arteriovenous fistula (AV) - Central venous catheters (CVCs) are associated
with a higher risk of bacteraemia - And also with a higher mortality
- The use of CVCs is increasing
Pastan et al.,2002 Kidney Int 62620-626. Xue et
al. 2003 Am J Kidney Dis 421013-1019. Lacson
et al. 2009 Am J Kidney Dis 5379-90.
3Audit questions
- What types of vascular access are used in
Scotland? - What are the determinants of access type?
- Sex Age Diagnosis Time since start of
treatment - Are there differences in access type between the
Scottish renal units, and if so, how large are
these differences?
4Patients on haemodialysis (HD)
- The number of prevalent patients on home or
hospital HD on 2 April 2007 was 1708 - Details of vascular access were available for
1609 patients (94) - Median age was 64 years
- 59 were male
- In April 2006, 76 of patients on haemodialysis
in Scotland were having AV access
5AV access and CVC use among HD patients (April
2007)
6Determinants of AV access - 1
- Males are more likely to have AV access
- No relation with age
Note only 11 patients younger than 20
7Determinants of AV access - 2
- Only patients with Diabetes are different from
the rest
8Determinants of AV access - 3
- AV access is low at the start of RRT
- It takes over a year before AV access is above 70
9Differences in AV access between Scottish renal
units April 2007
10Differences in AV access in a funnelplot
- A graph with a performance indicator on the
vertical-axis and the number of observations on
the horizontal-axis - A data point is added for each unit
- The overall mean of AV access is added as a
horizontal line - Control limits are added, assuming that the units
differ by chance only - Because the limits are tighter as the number of
observations is larger, the shape of a funnel
appears - Units outside the outer control limits are
considered to be different from the rest.
11Differences in AV access between adult Scottish
renal units April 2007
AV access High in RAIG and ARI Low in XH and MONK
12Results summary
- Arteriovenous access (predominantly fistulas) is
used by 73 of patients - Slight decrease in AV access since April 2006
- It takes longer than a year before AV access is
above 70 - Males more likely to have AV access
- Patients with Diabetes less likely to have AV
access - Large differences in AV access between the
Scottish renal units
13Reasons for differences between units
- Data quality?
- Data completeness?
- Patient mix?
- Service provision?
- Clinical practice?
- Or what.?