Evaluation of a system for sorbent‐assisted peritoneal dialysis in a uremic pig model

A system for sorbent‐assisted peritoneal dialysis (SAPD) has been developed that continuously recirculates dialysate via a tidal mode using a single‐lumen peritoneal catheter with the regeneration of spent dialysate by means of sorbents. SAPD treatment may improve plasma clearance by the maintenance...

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Published inPhysiological reports Vol. 8; no. 23; pp. e14593 - n/a
Main Authors Gelder, Maaike K., Vries, Joost C., Simonis, Frank, Monninkhof, Anneke S., Hazenbrink, Diënty H. M., Ligabue, Giulia, Giovanella, Silvia, Joles, Jaap A., Verhaar, Marianne C., Bajo Rubio, Maria A., Selgas, Rafael, Cappelli, Gianni, Gerritsen, Karin G. F.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States John Wiley & Sons, Inc 01.12.2020
John Wiley and Sons Inc
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Summary:A system for sorbent‐assisted peritoneal dialysis (SAPD) has been developed that continuously recirculates dialysate via a tidal mode using a single‐lumen peritoneal catheter with the regeneration of spent dialysate by means of sorbents. SAPD treatment may improve plasma clearance by the maintenance of a high plasma‐to‐dialysate concentration gradient and by increasing the mass transfer area coefficient (MTAC) of solutes. The system is designed for daily 8‐hr treatment (12 kg, nighttime system). A wearable system (2.3 kg, daytime system) may further enhance the clearance of phosphate and organic waste solutes during the day. Uremic pigs (n = 3) were treated with the day‐ (n = 3) and nighttime system (n = 15) for 4–8 hr per treatment. Plasma clearance (Cl), MTAC, and total mass transport (MT) of urea, creatinine, phosphate, and potassium were compared with a static dwell (n = 28). Cl, MTAC, and MT of urea, creatinine, phosphate, and potassium were low in the pig as compared to humans due to the pig's low peritoneal transport status and could be enhanced only to a limited extent by SAPD treatment compared with a static dwell (nighttime system: Cl urea: ×1.5 (p = .029), Cl creatinine: ×1.7 (p = .054), Cl phosphate: ×1.5 (p = .158), Cl potassium: ×1.6 (p = .011); daytime system: Cl creatinine: ×2.7 (p = .040), Cl phosphate: ×2.2 (p = .039)). Sorbent‐assisted peritoneal dialysis treatment in a uremic pig model is safe and enhances small solute clearance as compared to a static dwell. Future studies in humans or animal species with higher peritoneal transport should elucidate whether our SAPD system enhances clearance to a clinically relevant extent as compared to conventional PD. A system for sorbent‐assisted peritoneal dialysis (SAPD) has been developed that continuously recirculates dialysate via a tidal mode using a single lumen peritoneal catheter with regeneration of spent dialysate by means of sorbents. SAPD treatment may improve plasma clearance by maintenance of a high plasma‐to‐dialysate concentration gradient and by increasing the mass transfer area coefficient (MTAC) of solutes. The system is designed for daily 8‐hr treatment (12 kg, nighttime system). A wearable system (2.3 kg, daytime system) may further enhance clearance of phosphate and organic waste solutes during the day.
Bibliography:Funding information
This study was supported by the European Union (WEAKID, Horizon 2020 research and innovation program, grant agreement no. 733169) and by the Dutch Kidney Foundation and Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs by means of a PPP Allowance made available by the Top Sector Life Sciences & Health to stimulate public‐private partnerships (DKF project code PPS08). Fondazione Cassa di Risparmio di Modena (grant IT Sime n.2016.0098) supported the work of G. Ligabue, S. Giovanella, and G. Cappelli.
https://figshare.com/s/3d8f6e23168d21492880
https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.12318281
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Supplemental Materials are available at: URL: https://figshare.com/s/3d8f6e23168d21492880. https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.12318281.
ISSN:2051-817X
DOI:10.14814/phy2.14593