PERITONEAL DIALYSIS-ASSOCIATED PERITONITIS: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW

Authors

  • Devita Nur Amelia Faculty of Medicine, General Achmad Yani University Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.53555/nnmhs.v9i7.1765

Keywords:

Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD), Infection, Peritoneal Dialysis, Peritonitis

Abstract

Background: Peritoneal dialysis is infectious and non-infectious. Peritoneal dialysis causes catheter exit, tube tunnel, and peritonitis. Noninfectious consequences of peritoneal dialysis include catheter malfunction, external leakage, abdominal wall anomalies, scrotal edoema, pleural-peritoneal fistulas, failed ultrafiltration, and encapsulated sclerosis. PD complications include peritonitis. The International Society for Peritoneal Dialysis (ISPD) offers specific recommendations on PD-associated peritonitis prevention and treatment, however clinical practise differs greatly amongst dialysis units.

Aim: This article examines the link between peritoneal dialysis and peritonitis and presents its findings.

Methods: By evaluating the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) 2020 standards, this study demonstrated that it met all of the requirements. This enabled the researchers to ensure that the study was as up to date as feasible. Publications published between 2000 and 2023 were included in the search strategy, which included a variety of electronic reference databases (including Pubmed and SagePub). We did not consider review papers, duplicate publications, or half completed articles.

Result: In the PubMed database, the results of our search brought up 133 articles, whereas the results of our search on SagePub brought up 69 articles. The results of the search conducted for the last year of 2000 yielded a total of 20 articles for PubMed and 8 articles for SagePub. In the end, we compiled a total of 21 papers, six of which came from PubMed and three of which came from SagePub. We included nine research that met the criteria.

Conclusion: Gram-positive bacteria are the most common cause of Parkinson's disease-associated peritonitis. Despite the high frequency of PD-associated peritonitis, it has a high cure rate.

References

KDIGO CKD Work Group. KDIGO 2012 Clinical Practice Guideline for the Evaluation and Management of Chronic Kidney Disease. New York; 2013.

Setiati S, Alwi I, Sudoyo AW, Sumadibrata M, Setiyohadi B, Syam AF. Buku Ajar Ilmu Penyakit Dalam. 6th ed. Jakarta: Interna Publishing; 2014.

United States Renal Data System. Chapter 1: CKD in the General Population. 2015 USRDS annual data report: Epidemiology of Kidney Disease in the United States. Washington DC; 2015.

Coca SG, Singanamala S, Parikh CR. Chronic kidney disease after acute kidney injury: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Kidney Int. 2012;81:442–8.

Wong E. Chronic Kidney Disease. Lancet. 2012;379(8911):80–165.

Luyckx VA, Cherney DZI, Bello AK. Preventing CKD in developed countries. Kidney Int reports. 2020;5(3):263– 77.

Canaud B, Stuard S, Laukhuf F, Yan G, Canabal MIG, Lim PS, et al. Choices in hemodialysis therapies: variants, personalized therapy and application of evidencebased medicine. Clin Kidney J. 2021;14(Supplement_4):i45–58.

Valdenebro M, Martín-Rodríguez L, Tarragón B, Sánchez-Briales P, Portolés J. Renal replacement therapy in critically ill patients with acute kidney injury: 2020 nephrologist’s perspective. Nefrol (English Ed. 2021;41(2):102– 14.

Alicic RZ, Rooney MT, Tuttle KR. Diabetic kidney disease: challenges, progress, and possibilities. Clin J Am Soc Nephrol. 2017;12(12):2032–45.

Tandukar S, Palevsky PM. Continuous renal replacement therapy: who, when, why, and how. Chest. 2019;155(3):626–38.

Andreoli MCC, Totoli C. Peritoneal dialysis. Rev Assoc Med Bras. 2020;66:s37–44.

Szeto C-C, Li PK-T. Peritoneal Dialysis-Associated Peritonitis. Clin J Am Soc Nephrol. 2019 Jul;14(7):1100–5. [13] Ljungman S, Jensen JE, Paulsen D, Petersons A, Ots-Rosenberg M, Saha H, et al. Factors associated with time to first dialysis-associated peritonitis episode: Data from the Peritonitis Prevention Study (PEPS). Perit Dial Int J Int Soc Perit Dial. 2023 May;43(3):241–51.

Dzekova-Vidimliski P, Nikolov IG, Gjorgjievski N, Selim G, Trajceska L, Stojanoska A, et al. Peritoneal DialysisRelated Peritonitis: Rate, Clinical Outcomes and Patient Survival. Pril (Makedonska Akad na Nauk i Umet Oddelenie za Med Nauk. 2021 Dec;42(3):47–55.

Xu Y, Zhang Y, Yang B, Luo S, Yang Z, Johnson DW, et al. Prevention of peritoneal dialysis-related peritonitis by regular patient retraining via technique inspection or oral education: a randomized controlled trial. Nephrol Dial Transplant Off Publ Eur Dial Transpl Assoc - Eur Ren Assoc. 2020 Apr;35(4):676–86.

Hu S, Ming P, Qureshi AR, Lindholm B, Bo Y, Yang H. Peritonitis: Episode Sequence, Microbiological Variation, Risk Factors and Clinical Outcomes in a North China Peritoneal Dialysis Center. Kidney Blood Press Res. 2018;43(5):1573–84.

Htay H, Cho Y, Pascoe EM, Darssan D, Nadeau-Fredette A-C, Hawley C, et al. Multicenter Registry Analysis of Center Characteristics Associated with Technique Failure in Patients on Incident Peritoneal Dialysis. Clin J Am Soc Nephrol. 2017 Jul;12(7):1090–9.

Zelenitsky SA, Howarth J, Lagacé-Wiens P, Sathianathan C, Ariano R, Davis C, et al. Microbiological trends and antimicrobial resistance in peritoneal dialysisrelated peritonitis, 2005 to 2014. Perit Dial Int. 2017;37(2):170–6.

Teitelbaum I. Peritoneal Dialysis. N Engl J Med. 2021 Nov;385(19):1786–95.

Boudville N, Kemp A, Clayton P, Lim W, Badve S V, Hawley CM, et al. Recent peritonitis associates with mortality among patients treated with peritoneal dialysis. J Am Soc Nephrol. 2012 Aug;23(8):1398–405.

Li PK-T, Szeto CC, Piraino B, Bernardini J, Figueiredo AE, Gupta A, et al. Peritoneal dialysis-related infections recommendations: 2010 update. Perit Dial Int J Int Soc Perit Dial. 2010;30(4):393–423.

Piraino B, Bernardini J, Brown E, Figueiredo A, Johnson DW, Lye W-C, et al. ISPD position statement on reducing the risks of peritoneal dialysis-related infections. Perit Dial Int J Int Soc Perit Dial. 2011;31(6):614–30.

Szeto C-C, Li PK-T, Johnson DW, Bernardini J, Dong J, Figueiredo AE, et al. ISPD Catheter-Related Infection Recommendations: 2017 Update. Perit Dial Int J Int Soc Perit Dial. 2017;37(2):141–54.

van Diepen ATN, Tomlinson GA, Jassal S V. The association between exit site infection and subsequent peritonitis among peritoneal dialysis patients. Clin J Am Soc Nephrol. 2012 Aug;7(8):1266–71.

Gardezi AI, Schlageter KW, Foster DM, Astor BC, Chan MR, Waheed S. Erosion of the Silicone Peritoneal Dialysis Catheter with the Use of Gentamicin Cream at the Exit Site. Adv Perit Dial. 2016;32:15–8.

Gao Y, Yao Y, Zhang X, Chen F, Meng X-L, Chen X, et al. Regulatory T Cells: Angels or Demons in the Pathophysiology of Sepsis? Front Immunol. 2022;13.

Ong LM, Ch’ng CC, Wee HC, Supramaniam P, Zainal H, Goh BL, et al. Risk of peritoneal dialysis-related peritonitis in a multi-racial asian population. Perit Dial Int. 2017;37(1):35–43.

Szeto CC. The new ISPD peritonitis guideline. Ren Replace Ther. 2018;4(7):12–5.

Downloads

Published

2023-07-17

How to Cite

Amelia, D. N. (2023). PERITONEAL DIALYSIS-ASSOCIATED PERITONITIS: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW. Journal of Advanced Research in Medical and Health Science (ISSN 2208-2425), 9(7), 70-76. https://doi.org/10.53555/nnmhs.v9i7.1765

Similar Articles

61-70 of 246

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.

Most read articles by the same author(s)