1. Guideline recommendations on minimal blood vessel diameters and arteriovenous fistula outcomes.
- Author
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van Vliet LV, Zonnebeld N, Tordoir JH, Huberts W, Bouwman LH, Cuypers PW, Heinen SG, Huisman LC, Lemson S, Mees BM, Schlösser FJ, de Smet AA, Toorop RJ, Delhaas T, and Snoeijs MG
- Subjects
- Humans, Treatment Outcome, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Time Factors, Veins surgery, Veins diagnostic imaging, Veins physiopathology, Guideline Adherence standards, Predictive Value of Tests, Brachial Artery surgery, Brachial Artery diagnostic imaging, Regional Blood Flow, Arteriovenous Shunt, Surgical adverse effects, Arteriovenous Shunt, Surgical standards, Renal Dialysis standards, Vascular Patency, Upper Extremity blood supply, Practice Guidelines as Topic standards, Ultrasonography, Doppler, Duplex
- Abstract
Objective: Clinical guidelines provide recommendations on the minimal blood vessel diameters required for arteriovenous fistula creation but the evidence for these recommendations is limited. We compared vascular access outcomes of fistulas created in agreement with the ESVS Clinical Practice Guidelines (i.e. arteries and veins >2 mm for forearm fistulas and >3 mm for upper arm fistulas) with fistulas created outside these recommendations., Methods: The multicenter Shunt Simulation Study cohort contains 211 hemodialysis patients who received a first radiocephalic, brachiocephalic, or brachiobasilic fistula before publication of the ESVS Clinical Practice Guidelines. All patients had preoperative duplex ultrasound measurements according to a standardized protocol. Outcomes included duplex ultrasound findings at 6 weeks after surgery, vascular access function, and intervention rates until 1 year after surgery., Results: In 55% of patients, fistulas were created in agreement with the ESVS Clinical Practice Guidelines recommendations on minimal blood vessel diameters. Concordance with the guideline recommendations was more frequent for forearm fistulas than for upper arm fistulas (65% vs 46%, p = 0.01). In the entire cohort, agreement with the guideline recommendations was not associated with an increased proportion of functional vascular accesses (70% vs 66% for fistulas created within and outside guideline recommendations, respectively; p = 0.61) or with decreased access-related intervention rates (1.45 vs 1.68 per patient-year, p = 0.20). In forearm fistulas, however, only 52% of arteriovenous fistulas created outside these recommendations developed into a timely functional vascular access., Conclusions: Whereas upper arm arteriovenous fistulas with preoperative blood vessel diameters <3 mm had similar vascular access function as fistulas created with larger blood vessels, forearm arteriovenous fistulas with preoperative blood vessel diameters <2 mm had poor clinical outcomes. These results support that clinical decision-making should be guided by an individual approach., Competing Interests: Declaration of conflicting interestsThe author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
- Published
- 2024
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