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Arteriovenous Access for Hemodialysis: A Review.
JAMA. 2024 Apr 16; 331(15):1307-1317.JAMA

Abstract

IMPORTANCE

Hemodialysis requires reliable vascular access to the patient's blood circulation, such as an arteriovenous access in the form of an autogenous arteriovenous fistula or nonautogenous arteriovenous graft. This Review addresses key issues associated with the construction and maintenance of hemodialysis arteriovenous access.

OBSERVATIONS

All patients with kidney failure should have an individualized strategy (known as Patient Life-Plan, Access Needs, or PLAN) for kidney replacement therapy and dialysis access, including contingency plans for access failure. Patients should be referred for hemodialysis access when their estimated glomerular filtration rate progressively decreases to 15 to 20 mL/min, or when their peritoneal dialysis, kidney transplant, or current vascular access is failing. Patients with chronic kidney disease should limit or avoid vascular procedures that may complicate future arteriovenous access, such as antecubital venipuncture or peripheral insertion of central catheters. Autogenous arteriovenous fistulas require 3 to 6 months to mature, whereas standard arteriovenous grafts can be used 2 to 4 weeks after being established, and "early-cannulation" grafts can be used within 24 to 72 hours of creation. The prime pathologic lesion of flow-related complications of arteriovenous access is intimal hyperplasia within the arteriovenous access that can lead to stenosis, maturation failure (33%-62% at 6 months), or poor patency (60%-63% at 2 years) and suboptimal dialysis. Nonflow complications such as access-related hand ischemia ("steal syndrome"; 1%-8% of patients) and arteriovenous access infection require timely identification and treatment. An arteriovenous access at high risk of hemorrhaging is a surgical emergency.

CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE

The selection, creation, and maintenance of arteriovenous access for hemodialysis vascular access is critical for patients with kidney failure. Generalist clinicians play an important role in protecting current and future arteriovenous access; identifying arteriovenous access complications such as infection, steal syndrome, and high-output cardiac failure; and making timely referrals to facilitate arteriovenous access creation and treatment of arteriovenous access complications.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Medicine, Division of Nephrology, University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.Department of Surgery, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, Florida.Library and Information Services, University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. University Medical Imaging Toronto, University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Review

Language

eng

PubMed ID

38497953

Citation

Lok, Charmaine E., et al. "Arteriovenous Access for Hemodialysis: a Review." JAMA, vol. 331, no. 15, 2024, pp. 1307-1317.
Lok CE, Huber TS, Orchanian-Cheff A, et al. Arteriovenous Access for Hemodialysis: A Review. JAMA. 2024;331(15):1307-1317.
Lok, C. E., Huber, T. S., Orchanian-Cheff, A., & Rajan, D. K. (2024). Arteriovenous Access for Hemodialysis: A Review. JAMA, 331(15), 1307-1317. https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2024.0535
Lok CE, et al. Arteriovenous Access for Hemodialysis: a Review. JAMA. 2024 Apr 16;331(15):1307-1317. PubMed PMID: 38497953.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Arteriovenous Access for Hemodialysis: A Review. AU - Lok,Charmaine E, AU - Huber,Thomas S, AU - Orchanian-Cheff,Ani, AU - Rajan,Dheeraj K, PY - 2024/4/17/medline PY - 2024/3/18/pubmed PY - 2024/3/18/entrez SP - 1307 EP - 1317 JF - JAMA JO - JAMA VL - 331 IS - 15 N2 - IMPORTANCE: Hemodialysis requires reliable vascular access to the patient's blood circulation, such as an arteriovenous access in the form of an autogenous arteriovenous fistula or nonautogenous arteriovenous graft. This Review addresses key issues associated with the construction and maintenance of hemodialysis arteriovenous access. OBSERVATIONS: All patients with kidney failure should have an individualized strategy (known as Patient Life-Plan, Access Needs, or PLAN) for kidney replacement therapy and dialysis access, including contingency plans for access failure. Patients should be referred for hemodialysis access when their estimated glomerular filtration rate progressively decreases to 15 to 20 mL/min, or when their peritoneal dialysis, kidney transplant, or current vascular access is failing. Patients with chronic kidney disease should limit or avoid vascular procedures that may complicate future arteriovenous access, such as antecubital venipuncture or peripheral insertion of central catheters. Autogenous arteriovenous fistulas require 3 to 6 months to mature, whereas standard arteriovenous grafts can be used 2 to 4 weeks after being established, and "early-cannulation" grafts can be used within 24 to 72 hours of creation. The prime pathologic lesion of flow-related complications of arteriovenous access is intimal hyperplasia within the arteriovenous access that can lead to stenosis, maturation failure (33%-62% at 6 months), or poor patency (60%-63% at 2 years) and suboptimal dialysis. Nonflow complications such as access-related hand ischemia ("steal syndrome"; 1%-8% of patients) and arteriovenous access infection require timely identification and treatment. An arteriovenous access at high risk of hemorrhaging is a surgical emergency. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: The selection, creation, and maintenance of arteriovenous access for hemodialysis vascular access is critical for patients with kidney failure. Generalist clinicians play an important role in protecting current and future arteriovenous access; identifying arteriovenous access complications such as infection, steal syndrome, and high-output cardiac failure; and making timely referrals to facilitate arteriovenous access creation and treatment of arteriovenous access complications. SN - 1538-3598 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/38497953/Arteriovenous_Access_for_Hemodialysis:_A_Review. DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -