Kidney Failure: Prevention, Dialysis, or Transplantation

Kidney Failure: Prevention, Dialysis, or Transplantation

KIDNEY FAILURE: PREVENTION,

DIALYSIS, OR TRANSPLANTATION

by Ed Bryant

Photo: portrait. Caption: Ed Bryant

I have a special interest in renal failure, as I

have had a kidney transplant for over 16 years, and I feel great. I know folks who've had

transplants far longer than I have, and they're doing fine, too. I hope the following

answers some questions.

Prevention Comes First

"I'm sorry, but your kidneys are beginning

to fail..." If you hear those words, what do you do next? Knowing that nephropathy,

kidney failure, is a frequent complication of diabetes, do you sit and wait to get worse,

or do you act? What can YOU do to prevent, minimize, or slow kidney failure?

The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial

(DCCT), a large, long–term, federally–funded study of the relationship between

diabetes control and the onset of complications, in type 1 diabetics, found that there was

a tight statistical link between quality of diabetes control and ramifications such as

heart and blood vessel disease, diabetic eye disease, and diabetogenic kidney failure. The

British UKPDS (United Kingdom Prospective Diabetes Study), a similar long-term look at

type 2 diabetes, found the same pattern of results. We now know the tighter your control,

the less chance you will experience complications. (Note the linkage is not absolute; you

can do your best and still face these ramifications, though the statistical risk-reduction

is clear.)

The DCCT's findings are not mysterious. High

blood sugar causes diabetes complications; and the better job you do of keeping your blood

glucose numbers down where they should be, the less your chance of developing conditions

such as nephropathy. The importance of this cannot be overstated: Good

self–management is the BEST way to cut the risk of experiencing diabetes

complications.

There are other things you can do to cut the

risk. Some of them come under the heading of "healthy lifestyle." First, don't

smoke. Nicotine, the narcotic active ingredient in tobacco, is a vasoconstrictor, raising

blood pressure, stiffening capillaries, and making it harder for the kidneys to filter

wastes.

Urinary tract infections need prompt treatment,

to limit the damage they can do to already strained kidneys. Tell your doctor promptly, if

you think you have such an infection.

Excessive obesity both raises blood pressure and

increases insulin resistance. Keeping your weight at or below your recommended level helps

in general, and the resultant blood pressure drop is good for your kidneys.

You need to control your cholesterol, as too much

of this fatty substance in your blood overworks (and can even clog up) your kidneys. Diet,

exercise, and appropriate medications can lower your cholesterol levels.

Heart specialists have known for years that high

levels of stress can be damaging. Excessive stress, driving up blood pressure, can harm

the kidneys by raising fluid pressure, further straining already weakened filter networks.

Stress reduction is part of a healthy lifestyle.

There is a lot of disagreement among doctors over

the specifics of what will prevent kidney failure. So much is genetics; more may be

environment, or other factors we are not yet aware of. Other than "keep your diabetes

under the best possible control, and live a healthy lifestyle," we can offer little

advice about prevention. The manual, "The Prevention and Treatment of Complications

of Diabetes Mellitus," published 1991 by the Centers for Disease Control (and now

available on the World Wide Web, at: http://www.cdc.gov/diabetes/pubs/pubs.htm), states:

"At present, strategies for preventing diabetic nephropathy must be viewed as limited

in their effectiveness, since the exact pathogenic factors responsible for this condition

are unknown."

Once kidney disease is diagnosed, however, a

great deal can be done to retard its progression, and sometimes interventions such as

described above are sufficient to keep the need for dialysis or transplantation well at

bay. Current statistics suggest up to four out of every ten diabetics may experience

measurable kidney disease, though with considerations such as described in this article,

many of these individuals should be able to avoid outright kidney failure, End Stage Renal

Disease (ESRD).

If you do your best and still experience kidney

failure, it is not time to despair. Whether you choose transplantation, or one of the

forms of dialysis, the outlook is good and getting better all the time.

Testing Your Kidney

How is the severity of kidney disease measured?

Several tests measure creatinine, a waste product from muscle mass. Although everyone

produces creatinine, people whose kidneys are failing cannot properly excrete it. One test

measures the amount of creatinine in the blood, and the other is "creatinine

clearance," a 24–hour urine test. Normal "blood creatinine," for

someone with healthy kidneys, is about 0.7 to 1.3. Government guidelines (April 1995)

recommend dialysis when the blood creatinine rises to 6 or above (the number rises as you

get worse). However, some diabetics will experience kidney failure before that point.

There is much variation between individuals who have ESRD, and the actual range for

"kidney failure" runs from 3 through 8--but at or above 6, Medicare will pay for

dialysis.

"Creatinine clearance" is considered a

more reliable test. In this 24-hour urine test, the numbers produced approximately

indicate the percent of normal kidney function remaining to the individual (the number

goes down as you get worse). The 1995 government guidelines (which relate to Medicare part

B eligibility) state they will fund dialysis when the test produces a reading of 15 or

less.

Two other tests measure protein spillage into the

urine. These are the microalbumin test and the test for proteinurea. The protein albumin

is not normally excreted into the urine, and its presence in the urine, in small amounts

(microalbuminuria) or larger concentrations (proteinurea) can indicate kidney disease.

While not considered absolute diagnostic evidence, a positive finding in either should be

immediately followed by further testing, as these tests are very sensitive, and the

microalbumin test can detect kidney disease long before the other tests–-allowing

earlier medical intervention.

Options

Individuals experiencing impaired kidney

function, but whose test results indicate that they do not yet need dialysis or

transplantation, might benefit from two new therapies. The first is regular use of ACE

(Angiotensin-Converting-Enzyme) Inhibitors, commonly used to control hypertension, high

blood pressure. Now widely accepted, these ACE Inhibitors have been shown to significantly

reduce further kidney degeneration. In FDA Clinicals, the ACE Inhibitor Captopril (trade

name Capoten) was given to patients showing early signs of kidney damage. It reduced fluid

pressure in the kidneys, and cut in half the rate of kidney failure in its test

population. Doctors have since prescribed other ACE Inhibitors, with similar results.

Note: A diabetic experiencing kidney failure, but whose blood pressure is not elevated,

can still use ACE Inhibitors for keeping fluid pressure down in the kidneys. This therapy

has been shown to significantly reduce strain on eyes and cardiovascular system as well.

Talk to your nephrologist about the ACE Inhibitors.

A new class of similar drugs is the Angiotensin

II Receptor Antagonists (or ARBs). Teveten, the first member of this class to gain FDA

approval, "may be of benefit in preserving renal function in patients with

progressive renal disease," researchers state.

Aminoguanidine (Pimagedine) is another

possibility. Tests are still underway, but this drug appears to reduce the damage done to

the kidneys by excess glucose in the blood (and may reduce retinopathy as well). Other

options are certain to materialize, both for those with impaired kidney function and for

those whose kidneys have failed.

End Stage Renal Disease

The damaged kidney may worsen to the point (as

described in "Testing Your Kidney," above) where it can no longer carry out its

blood-purifying function. Now dialysis or transplantation are necessary in order to

preserve life. This is ESRD, end stage renal disease. What are your options then?

There are three. In hemodialysis, the patient's

circulatory system is temporarily linked with a machine that performs the

blood–cleansing functions of the human kidney. In peritoneal dialysis (CAPD or CCPD)

a tube is inserted into the patient's peritoneal cavity, allowing urine and unneeded

fluids to periodically drain from the body. The third option is kidney transplantation, in

which a donated kidney is surgically implanted into the patient's body.

According to U.S. Renal Data System (USRDS)

figures, more than 304,083 Americans have ESRD, and 221,596 of these kidney patients are

undergoing dialysis at this time. In 1995, the last year for which Centers for Disease

Control (CDC) figures are available, there were 27,851 new cases of ESRD among persons

with diabetes, and 98,872 diabetics were undergoing dialysis or transplantation treatment

that year. National Institutes of Health statistics show that 35.9% of all individuals

facing dialysis are there because of diabetes, and about 40% of those commencing dialysis

or seeking a transplant at this time are diabetic. Some remain on dialysis long–term;

others make use of the process while awaiting a kidney transplant. As an aside, before

1970, few diabetic ESRD patients were dialyzed; they simply sickened and died. Those who

did dialyze faced a high mortality rate. Medicine has come a long way since then, and the

odds have improved with the options. Dialysis techniques have improved substantially since

my personal experience with them.

Dialysis

Dialysis is not an "artificial kidney."

A person undergoing hemodialysis must be hooked up to a machine three times a week, three

to four hours per session. A normal vein cannot tolerate the 16–gauge needles that

must be inserted into the arm during hemodialysis, so the doctor must surgically connect a

vein in the wrist with an artery, forming a bulging fistula that will better accommodate

the large needles needed for treatment.

Like the kidney, a hemodialysis machine is a

filter. Where it uses tubes and chemicals, the kidney uses millions of microscopic blood

vessels, fine enough to pass urine while retaining suspended proteins. Long–term high

blood glucose can significantly damage the kidney's filters, leading to scarring,

blockage, and diminished renal function. Diabetes is the leading cause of kidney disease.

Long–term diabetics often have cardiovascular and blood pressure problems, and the

added strain of hemodialysis, with its rise in blood pressure straining eyes and heart

function, can be too much for some. The diabetic dialysis patient spends, on the average,

33% more time in the hospital than does the non–diabetic dialysis patient, according

to 1999 USRDS figures.

Some patients choose CAPD (continuous ambulatory

peritoneal dialysis) or its variant, CCPD (continuous cycling peritoneal dialysis), both

of which can be carried out at home, without an assistant. Unlike hemodialysis, which uses

a big machine to remove toxic impurities from the blood, peritoneal dialysis works inside

the body, making use of the peritoneal membrane to retain a reservoir of dialysis

solution, which is exchanged for fresh solution, via catheter, every four to eight hours.

CAPD is carried out by the patient, who simply exchanges spent for fresh solution, every

four to eight hours, at home, at work, or while travelling. CCPD, its variant, makes use

of an automated cycler, which performs the exchanges while the patient is asleep. Although

more complicated and machine–dependent, it does allow daytime freedom from exchanges,

and may be the appropriate choice for some. Though the risk of infections is heightened

(as it is with any permanent catheterization), these two processes have advantages, one

being that insulin can be added to the dialysis solution, freeing the patient from the

need to inject, and giving good blood sugar control.

Transplantation

Kidney transplantation is a logical alternative

for many. It substantially improves a patient's quality of life. Although the transplant

recipient must be on anti–rejection/ immunosuppressive therapy for life, with the

inherent risk from otherwise nuisance infections, a transplant frees the patient from the

many hours spent on hemodialysis procedures each week, or from the periodic

"exchanges" and open catheter of CAPD, allowing a nearly normal lifestyle. For

those ESRD patients who can handle the stresses of transplant surgery, the resulting gains

in physical well–being add up to real improvement in quality of life and overall

longevity.

"Fifty percent of all kidney

transplantations taking place today are into diabetics," states Giacomo Basadonna,

MD, PhD, a transplant surgeon at Yale University School of Medicine, in New Haven,

Connecticut. He reports that success rates are identical with kidney transplants performed

on non–diabetic ESRD patients. "Today," he advises, "average kidney

survival, from a living donor, is greater than 15 years."

One of the areas where we are seeing rapid

improvement is immunosuppressive medication. The traditional mix of immunosuppressants:

cyclosporine, prednisone, imuran, is giving way to more targeted medications that may have

fewer side effects. Cellcept, by Roche/Syntex, and Rapamycin (Rapamune), by Wyeth/Ayerst,

have been approved by the FDA, and others are being tested. The risk of organ rejection is

always present, but each new development increases the chances of success.

I and others knowledgeable in kidney

transplantation advise you to pick the best transplant center possible. Once you have read

their statistics, ask your prospective center the following questions. If they don't

answer to your satisfaction, you should consider going to another center.

1. Do you have an information packet for

prospective donors and recipients?

2. Can you put me in touch with someone who has

had a transplant at your center?

3. What is your "graft survival"

(success) rate?

4. Who will my transplant surgeon be? If a fellow

or resident, will he/she be supervised by a practicing transplant surgeon?

5. How long have your current surgeons been doing

kidney transplants? How many have they done? That your center has 35 years experience with

kidney transplants is of little consequence if my surgeon has only done ten in his or her

career.

6. What is the average post–operative stay

in your hospital?

7. When I come for my transplant, or come back

for follow–ups, will there be any affordable housing for me and/or my family? (Ronald

McDonald House, or other lodging with discount rates...) or will I get stuck in a luxury

hotel for $125 a night?

8. How often will I need to come back to the

center for follow–ups? Can my nephrologist do the blood tests and send you the

results?

9. Can you recommend a nephrologist in my area?

10. Do you have a toll–free number to call

for after–transplant information?

11. What is your policy on people with

insufficient health insurance? Will you work with an uninsured patient? What will it cost?

12. Are you prepared to satisfy my doubts? Will

you show me the documents that answer my questions? Will you guarantee the price quoted?

Transplant Patients Speak:

The following individuals are the real experts.

Collectively, they have more than 146 years experience living with a transplant! All of

them would choose a transplant again. Although kidney transplantation is not for everyone,

and sometimes it doesn't work, it should be given strong consideration.

Eivind Frost, from Montana, received a cadaver

kidney on April 24, 1973, at University of Minnesota Hospital in Minneapolis (now

Fairview–University Medical Center), and is doing fine. He tells us, "I've been

feeling great for 26 years now."

Ken Carstens, from Minnesota, who received his

kidney transplant at University of Minnesota Hospital in Minneapolis, on September 10,

1975, states, "It's been 24 years now, and I'd make the same choice again."

Karen Mayry, from South Dakota, received her

kidney transplant at University of Minnesota Hospital in Minneapolis, on January 12, 1977.

She declares, "I feel great!"

Betty Walker, from Missouri, received her

transplant on July 13, 1978, at Yale–New Haven Hospital in Connecticut. In her words:

"I was just existing on dialysis; and my transplant gave life back to me."

Lenny Ruygt, from California, received her kidney

at Presbyterian Hospital (now Pacific Medical Center), in San Francisco, on St. Patrick's

Day, March 17, 1980. She says: "On dialysis, I had no energy at all--I would sleep

all but two hours of a day. After my transplant, I felt energized!"

Linda Bingham, from Ohio, who received a dual

transplant (kidney and pancreas) at University Hospital in Cincinnati, Ohio, on December

10, 1981, says, "I feel great. I have been given a whole new life."

Ed Bryant, from Missouri, received his transplant

on August 9, 1983, at University of Minnesota Hospital in Minneapolis. He says:

"There is no comparison between life on dialysis, and how I've felt since my

transplant."

Facts and Statistics

What is the success rate for

kidney–transplant surgery? According to the "United States Renal Data System

1993 Annual Data Report," published by the National Institutes of Health, about 75%

for a cadaver–donated kidney, better than 90% with a kidney donated by a living

relative, with an overall success rate of better than 85%, better than 90% in some

centers. UNOS data indicate the averages (based on graft survival, healthy kidney, five

years after transplant) are improving. The National Institutes of Health reports that

current "graft survival" (donated kidneys successfully functioning in the

transplant recipient) rates are approximately the same, whether the recipient has diabetes

or not.

What percentage of type I diabetics will face

ESRD? Current statistics suggest between 20 and 25%, with many factors (genetic, ethnic,

lifestyle) taken into account.

Must the ESRD patient be on dialysis before being

considered for a transplant? NO! Although some behind–the–times nephrologists

still believe so, Fairview–University Medical Center's Transplant Center, which

pioneered diabetic kidney transplantation, recommends that once your physician has

determined kidney failure is on the way, further delay could be harmful. The more time

spent subjecting your body to the toxic excesses of kidney failure and the strains of

dialysis, the greater the risk of serious complications like retinopathy and

cardiovascular (heart) degeneration.

Your nephrologist should be able to tell you more

about your options. For information about kidney transplantation, contact a reputable

transplant center (there are more than 252 in the U.S. today), or the United Network for

Organ Sharing, 1100 Boulders Park, Suite 500, Richmond, VA 23225; telephone:

1-800-243-6667; website: http://www.unos.org All UNOS information is available on the

World Wide Web, but they will also send you pertinent information, by mail, on any three

transplant centers you request, without charge.

For information or assistance with interpreting

transplant center data, contact: Health Resources and Services Administration, Bureau of

Health Resources Development, Division of Transplantation, Park Lawn Bldg., 5600 Fishers

Lane, Room 7C-22, Rockville, MD 20857; telephone: (301) 443–7577; website:

http://www.hrsa.gov/osp/dot

Renal failure is not a kiss of death. There are

options, and at least one of them will be right for you. Keep your diabetes under good

control, and your blood pressure down, to cut the risks--but if it happens (like it did to

me), remember that with proper care you stand every chance of living just as long as you

would have with healthy kidneys.

More Resources:

American Association of Kidney Patients, 100

South Ashley Drive, Suite 280, Tampa, FL 33602; telephone: 1–800–749–2257;

website: http://www.aakp.org/aakpteam.html. Publishes the quarterly magazine

"Renalife," with articles about dialysis and transplantation.

American Kidney Fund, 6110 Executive Boulevard,

Suite 1010, Rockville, MD 20852; telephone: 1-800-638-8299. Offers financial aid ($200

limit), provides written and phone information on kidney diseases. website:

http://www.kidneyfund.org

Diabetes Action Network, National Federation of

the Blind, Renal Failure—Dialysis and Transplantation Support Committee, 811 Cherry

Street, Suite 309, Columbia, MO 65201; telephone: (573) 875-8911. website:

http://www.nfb.org/voice.htm. Offers information, encouragement, and support on a

person–to–person basis for diabetics.

Fairview University Medical Center, Patient

Education Department, 420 Delaware St. SE, Box 603, Minneapolis, MN 55455; telephone:

(612) 273-3354. Offers "The Transplant Handbook," prepared for patients facing

kidney transplantation. Available in standard print or audiocassette, cost: $12 (print) or

$30 (6 tapes).

National Diabetes Information Clearinghouse, 1

Information Way, Bethesda, MD 20892; telephone: (301) 654-3327; website:

http://www.niddk.nih.gov/health/ diabetes/diabetes.htm Provides free and low–cost

publications on aspects of diabetes.

National Foundation for Transplants, 1102

Brookfield, Suite 202, Memphis, TN 38119; telephone: 1–800–489–3863;

website: http://www.transplants.org. Advice and instruction on fund–raising to cover

transplant costs on any organ.

National Kidney Foundation, Inc., 30 E. 33rd

Street, New York, NY 10016; telephone: 1-800-622-9010; website; http://www.kidney.org.

Provides services such as: doctor referrals, patient peer counseling, education,

medication programs, transportation, and financial services.

National Kidney and Urologic Diseases Information

Clearinghouse, 3 Information Way, Bethesda, MD 20892; telephone: (301) 654-4415. Provides

free information booklets such as #KU–50: "End Stage Renal Disease, Choosing a

Treatment That's Right for You," and #KU-134: "Eat Right to Feel Right on

Hemodialysis." Two new publications will be "dictionaries," of urologic

diseases, and of kidney diseases. Contact NKUDIC for availability information. All

publications are downloadable from their website:

http://www.niddk.nih.gov/health/kidney/nkudic.htm

National Transplant Assistance Fund, PO Box 258,

Bryn Mawr, PA 19010; telephone: 1-800-642-8399; website: http://www.transplantfund.org

Helps patients set up fundraising programs to cover transplantation costs on any organ;

also offers small emergency grants.

The Patient Travel Service, Fresenius Medical

Care, Two Ledgemont Place, 95 Hayden Ave., Lexington, MA 02420; telephone: 1-800-634-6254.

Provides referrals and information for dialysis patients wishing to travel anywhere in the

world, who need dialysis facilities. Also offers free brochure, "On the

Road...Again," a how-to guide for arranging dialysis away from home.

PhRMA, Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers

of America, Publications Department, 1100 15th Street NW, 9th Floor,

Washington, DC 20005; telephone: (202) 835-3400; website: http://www.phrma.org. An

industry association, PhRMA publishes a catalog of member companies offering free or

low–cost drugs/medications for the indigent, available for download from their

website.

Stadtlanders Pharmacy, 600 Penn Center Boulevard,

Pittsburgh, PA 15235; telephone: 1-800-238-7828; website: http://www.stadtlanders.com

Medication, delivery, and insurance billing; organ transplant recipients receive free

express delivery of medication, anywhere in the U.S.A.

United States Renal Data Survey, USRDS

Coordinating Center, 914 S. 8th Street, Suite D206, Minneapolis, MN 55404; telephone:

(612) 347-7776; website: http://www.usrds.org

Noven Pharmaceuticals, of Miami, Florida, is one

of the companies exploring this technique, the medicated insulin patch. Its president,

Steven Sablotsky, commented, "Research continues... If this proves to be a new way of

delivering insulin, commercialization would still be several years away."

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