Publication: Incidence of Hypersensitivity Reactions During Hemodialysis.
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Date
2018-09-20
Authors
Esteras, Raquel
Martín-Navarro, Juan
Ledesma, Gabriel
Fernández-Prado, Raúl
Carreño, Gilda
Cintra, Melissa
Cidraque, Ignacio
Sanz, Ignacio
Tarragón, Blanca
Alexandru, Simona
Advisors
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Abstract
A recent alert from Spanish health authorities warned of a higher incidence of reported hypersensitivity reactions to hemodialysis membranes with polysulfone, in the 2017 review of acute reactions to dialyzers found only published reports in the 21st century on polysulfone and its derivatives. The aim is to assess/evaluate the current incidence and characteristics of hypersensitivity reactions in hemodialysis patients. A retrospective multicentre study in 9 Spanish hospitals evaluated patients in whom a hypersensitivity reaction required a change in dialyzer membrane. A total of 37 patients out of 1561 (2.37%) had hypersensitivity reactions and clinical, epidemiological and analytical data were available for 33 patients (2.11%). The membranes involved were polysulfone (n=23), polynephron (n=8), polyethersulfone (n=1) and polyacrylonitrile (n=1). This distribution reflected the frequency of use of membranes in the participating dialysis units. The reactions were described as type A in 18 cases and type B in 15 cases. There were no significant differences between the two types in clinical symptoms, the composition of the membrane involved, the method of sterilization, the season, or the time during the session in which they occurred. The most frequent symptom was dyspnea/breathlessness (64% of reactions). Eosinophilia was common (74%). 54% of the reactions occurred within the first 30 minutes of hemodialysis, 64% occurred during the first year of dialysis, and 54% required discontinuation of dialysis session. Cellulose triacetate was used as an alternative dialyzer in 78% of the cases. The incidence of hypersensitivity reactions was in the range found in reports from 20 years ago and is observed associated with synthetic membranes, not just polysulfones. Cellulose triacetate appears to be a good alternative for these patients.
Description
MeSH Terms
Acrylic Resins
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Cellulose
Female
Humans
Hypersensitivity
Male
Membranes, Artificial
Middle Aged
Polymers
Renal Dialysis
Retrospective Studies
Sulfones
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Cellulose
Female
Humans
Hypersensitivity
Male
Membranes, Artificial
Middle Aged
Polymers
Renal Dialysis
Retrospective Studies
Sulfones
DeCS Terms
CIE Terms
Keywords
Acute reaction, Allergic reaction, Dialyzer, Hemodialysis, Membrane, Polynephron, Polysulfone