Home hemo, either daily or nocturnal, is about as good as a transplant.
Since it was demonstrated in 1995 that creatinine is toxic, causing accelerated athero- and arteriosclerosis, an elevated level will always pull down the life expectancy.
The problem always is that there is one lab value which is never the same on dialysis as with a successful transplant, and that is the creatinine level. Even right after hemodialysis sessions patients are often going home with a creatinine of 300+, but with a successful transplant, the creatinine will range between 80 and 130 all the time. Since it was demonstrated in 1995 that creatinine is toxic, causing accelerated athero- and arteriosclerosis, an elevated level will always pull down the life expectancy.
Physiologic values for a normal, healthy kidney or a well-functioning transplant on the scale you are using would range from a creatinine level of 0.7 to 1.3.
Creatinine is TOXIC. Anything higher than the normal range of 0.7 to 1.3 may be classified as 'acceptable' in the world of dialysis where it is a given that good health outcomes are impossible, but 'acceptable' is not equivalent to 'healthy,' as the vastly foreshortened life expectancy of dialysis patients demonstrates.
Bill has written quite a bit about this (see his post earlier in this thread).
The decisive limiting factor to the life expectancy of patients on short daily dialysis is going to be death from lack of vascular access, which kills 15% of dialysis patients, but which has not even been taken into account in the studies showing the benefits of short daily dialysis, since it is a cause of mortality which only becomes measurable after a number of years have been spent on dialysis.